Please tell us which country and city you'd like to see the weather in.

back to playlist

Why China'sOne-Child Policy Failed - https://youtu.be/eNKQT7Ub2Ps
Subscribe! http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
No woman has ruled over China since the 7th century, but the tides may be slowly shifting. How much power do Chinese women have?
Learn More:
Smithsonian Magazine: The Demonization of Empress Wu
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-demonization-of-empress-wu-20743091/
The Washington Post: Researchers may have 'found' many of China's 30 million missing girls
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2016/11/30/researchers-may-have-found-many-of-chinas-30-million-missing-girls/?utm_term=.4d5c0821c4f5
The New York Times: China's Leftover Women
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/12/opinion/global/chinas-leftover-women.htmlMusicTrack Courtesy of APM Music: "Intensity"
Subscribe to SeekerDaily!
http://bit.ly/1GSoQoY
_________________________
Seeker Daily is committed to answering the smart, inquisitive questions we have about life, society, politics and anything else happening in the news. It's a place where curiosity rules and together we'll get a clearer understanding of this crazy world we live in.
Watch more Seeker Daily: http://bit.ly/1GSoQoY
Seeker Daily now has a newsletter! Get a weekly round-up of our most popular videos across all the shows we make here at Seeker Daily. For more info and to sign-up, click here. http://bit.ly/1UO1PxI
Subscribe now! http://bit.ly/1GSoQoY
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Trace Dominguez on Twitter: https://twitter.com/TraceDominguez
Jules Suzdaltsev on Twitter: https://twitter.com/jules_su
Seeker Daily on Facebook http://bit.ly/1qcsFTk
Seeker Daily on Google+ http://bit.ly/1OmDEQa
Written by: Jules Suzdaltsev
Edited by: AlexEsteves
Produced by: Cailyn Bradley, Semany Gashaw & Lauren Ellis

published:31 Jan 2017

views:153796

Get 1 week early access to EVERY ADVChina episode by supporting us on Patreon
SerpentZA: http://www.patreon.com/serpentza
C-Milk: http://www.patreon.com/laowhy86
Sheng nu (剩女; shèngnǚ; common translation: "leftover women" or "leftover ladies") is a derogatory term made popular by the All-China Women's Federation that classifies women who remain unmarried in their late twenties and beyond. The term is most prominently used in China, including a state sponsored directive and program, but has been used to describe women across Asia, India, and North America. The term has gone on to become widely used in the mainstream media and has been the subject of several televisions series, magazine and newspaper articles, and book publications focusing on both the good and bad aspects of the term and surrounding culture. Xu Xiaomin of The China Daily described the sheng nus as "a social force to be reckoned with" while others have argued the term should be taken as a positive to mean "successful women". The slang term, 3S or 3S Women, meaning "single, seventies (1970s), and stuck" has also been used in place of sheng nu. The equivalent term for men, guang gun (光棍) meaning bare branches, is used to refer to men who do not marry and thus do not add 'branches' to the family tree. Similarly, shengnan (剩男) or "leftover men" has also been used.
Hop on and find out!
Living in China for so long, we would like to share some of the comparisons that we have found between China and the west, and shed some light on the situation.
Every week, we take you to a new place in China on our bikes, cover a topic, and reply to your questions.
DiscountPromo Code: RIDEWITHUS
https://vimeo.com/ondemand/conqueringsouthernchina
⚫ Watch Conquering Southern China NOW!
Winston and I ride 5000 km across 5 Chinese provinces and discover crazy food, people and customs!
Tune in, hop on, and stay awesome!
http://www.facebook.com/churchillcustoms
http://www.facebook.com/advchina
Our sister channels:
http://www.youtube.com/SerpentZA
http://www.youtube.com/laowhy86
How we communicate on the bikes and the gear we use to make the videos:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P0VkKSdwkTs
Music: Cartoon feat. Jüri Pootsmann - I Remember U

published:05 Dec 2016

views:690033

An advertisement centred around "leftover women" in China has gone viral, provoking an emotional debate about single women in the country. The issue of unmarried females, often stigmatised as "sheng nu" or leftover women, has long been a topic of concern in a society that prioritises marriage and motherhood for women.
Người Việt TV (c) 2016 - http://NGUOIVIETTV.com
Người Việt Online - http://NGUOI-VIET.com

Naomi Wu is a 23-year-old self-taught tinkerer, having learned her tech skills from online tutorials and groups.
The self described "sexy cyborg" is keen to promote China as a center for innovation and women's roles as a part of China's tech evolution.

published:21 Dec 2016

views:1312

Unlike their peers around the world, Muslim women in China are enjoying having female-only mosques and getting a unique opportunity to develop their religious knowledge.
"I feel so blessed to have a mosque I can visit," 80-year-old Ma Guifang told China Daily on Tuesday, November 20.
"Not many female Muslims enjoy such a privilege."
For the past 20 years, the elderly Muslim lady from the Hui ethnic group has been attending this women-only mosque, a phenomenon unique to China.
The province's Muslim women are proud of being able to take care of their mosque.
Ma Lan, the 46-year-old caretaker, rises at 4 am to shovel coal into the boiler to ensure a good supply of hot water for the washing ritual.
She even cooperates with other female worshippers in keeping the mosque clean and ready for daily prayers and Friday congregation, which gathers about 150 worshippers.
"Women do all the work here, no matter how physical it gets," Ma said.
The mosque is financed solely by donations from female worshippers and visitors as well.
"We receive about 2,000 to 3,000 yuan ($321 to $481) a month," imam Tao Jinling said, pointing at the list of donors and how much they gave.
"Around 20 to 30 people come to the mosque every day. The number rises to around 150 during the Juma prayers on Friday."
According to official data, China has 20 million Muslims, most of them are concentrated in Xinjiang, Ningxia, Gansu, and Qinghai regions and provinces.
Unofficially, Muslim groups say the number is even higher, stating that there are from 65-100 million Muslims in China — up to 7.5 percent of the population.
In general, during Muslim prayers, women may not lead men but may lead other women, which is the case of females leading prayers in female-only mosques in China.
In Islam, the majority of jurists maintain that a woman is allowed to lead her fellow sisters in congregational prayer if there is no man to lead the congregation.
EducationChinese Muslims praise efforts of the women-only mosques in educating females about their religion.
"Only China has women's mosques, but this is not a common practice among Chinese Muslims," said Jin Rubin, secretary-general of the China Islamic Association.
"But one thing for sure is that women's mosques can provide them with a better level of education, which Islam greatly encourages."
WangYuming, director of Lanzhou's Xihu mosque, which also runs a school for women, agrees.
"Muslims care about education for women because we believe they are the lighthouse of the family," he said
"Their influence helps to keep our society stable."
The school costs the mosque about 500,000 yuan every year, but Wang believes it's worth the cost.
"In addition to teaching the women about the Qur'an and Islam, we also teach them basic math and urge them to tell their children to stay away from drugs," he said.
"Female Muslims deserve a decent level of education and the mosque is the best place to provide that.
"Now that winter has come, we have to make sure the classrooms are warm enough to allow elderly students with arthritis to sit through the classes without pain," said Wang.
Studying at the school for five years, Ma Lanying, 76, said that learning is a lifelong activity for Muslims.
"I feel so proud that I can understand the Qur'an and know exactly what the prayers mean," said Ma, who walks 45 minutes to school every weekday.
Determined to change her life, Ma Aizheng, who worked as a nurse before she retired, said she makes time to study at home in the afternoon after classes finish at 11:30 am.
"Studying the Qur'an has become a spiritual support for me," said Ma.
"I didn't have time when I was working and now I have a lot catching up to do."
more information at http://youtube.com/user/cosmeticmachines

published:16 Nov 2013

views:50322

I thought I would see what a Chinese hair salon could do with my head top. Uhhhhhhhh yeah It didn't go so well, he was ripping my hair out, he didn't know how to brush it, and the heat tools weren't hot enough to straighten out my hair, but to be fair a lot of hair salons in America can't do my hair either, I have lots of long, thick, curly hair, so....
Thanks for watching!
SOCIAL MEDIA
INSTAGRAM
@maryjanebyarm
SNAPCHAT
@poundcayke
FACEBOOK
@Maryjane Byarm
WECHAT
MARYJANERAIN

In today’s VLOG, March 11th, A Woman’s HealthFun Run. EVA in a tutu. Anny has a ferocious appetite. Dim Sum brunch. SingaporeDinner. Eva the fish!
Freewell DroneVideo: https://youtu.be/jr345b5aANY
The JY_VLOG is a series of semi-daily videos about my life living abroad in China. Early videos follow my expedition up Everest, and future videos will follow me as I cycle around the world from Ningbo, China to Los Angeles, USA. But for now, the VLOGs follow my everyday life in China, and give you a glimpse thru my lens at what its like to live in Asia, and all the hilarity and drama that ensues. Ohh.. and I have a reef tank, fly drones and ride trikes… so if that wets your fancy, subscribe to see more every day.
JaYoe!
MUSIC:
Opener - Garoto by Birocratic
JORDYN EDMONDS - FEEL RIGHT
https://jordynedmonds.bandcamp.com/track/feel-right
Jordyn Edmonds - Feel Like DANCING https://jordynedmonds.bandcamp.com/track/feel-like-dancing
follow my…
Website at http://www.jayoe.com
YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/JaYoeNation
Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/jayoelife/
Twitter at https://twitter.com/jayoelife
PersonalFacebook at https://www.facebook.com/mcgalat
JaYoe Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/JaYoeLife/
My Audio Podcast on Itunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/podcast-jayoe!/id1044254053?mt=2
If you wonder what JaYoe means : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4m7t4Vt1Ir8
MY GEAR:
DJI Mavic Drone: http://jayoe.com/mavic
GoPro Hero4 http://jayoe.co m/hero4dir
Feiyu Tech G4S http://jayoe.com/feiyudir
Canon 5D MkIII http://jayoe.com/5d3dir
The Canon G7X http://jayoe.com/g7xdir
My Trike | the Scorpion 20fs: http://jayoe.com/scorpion20fsdir
My trike AIDOO trailer: http://jayoe.com/aidoodir
If you would like to see more information about the my trike, check out my video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xg1Wzsz00dM
This is JY_VLOG #281
A SEMI-DAILY CHINA VLOG
#chinavlog #china #vlogging #ningbo #chinavlogger #jayoe #Jayoenation #travelvlogger #travelvlog #zhejiang

" Rice water " .. the mystery of the village women long hair
May 25, 2014
Hair is the crown of women's accessories and femininity , but for the tribe, " Yao " in the village of ethnic Hewanglu China , poetry is the most valuable asset owned by women there . Where village women leave their hair long , nor Iksnh only once in life , because they believe that the long hair brings wealth, health and good luck. It also increases their beauty and Iqbal discourse on them .
Called on the name of this village , " village long hair " and the village has recorded a record high in the length of the hair and thus entered the Guinness " Guinness " . With an average length of women's hair by the woman 's 120, about 1.7 meters and exceed the Otoulh 2.1 meters .
During the summer and autumn women tend to the river to wash their hair and then covered with a scarf Blue obscured from sight , and habits that existed tribe of a few years ago that he was not allowed to non- spouses and children to see a woman's hair is a Msdol , if this happens and that he saw a foreign woman's hair Msdol which he had to live with her family for a period of 3 years Ksr , and after the demise of this tradition became women combing their hair black in public places without fear of sanctions that were imposed on them in the past.
Allows women Hewanglu cut their hair only once in their lives , and so Bploghen the age of 16 and can then also start to look for her partner , but the cut of her hair provides for Jeddah girl who will maintain it to guide it back to the girl on her wedding day to become the later part of her hair daily .
Each hairstyle of hairstyles owners long hair meaning and significance , if the hair is wrapped around the head of the woman , it means that she's married and has no children , and if it was coiled in a circular fashion on her forehead that would mean she is married and has children , and if she was wearing a scarf around her head , it means it looking for a partner for life , and the secret of the beauty of their hair due to the use of recipes and combinations , especially in helping them to maintain the length of hair and glitter color black even at the age of eighty.
And contributed to the women of this small village , which is famous for its population of red clothes , too, in the famous village in attracting a number of tourists who come to see the women with the long hair .
" Shampoo rice " .. the secret of women " Hewanglu "
Because of the secret behind the exaggerated height of the women feeling Yao tribe , to take care of Mutirhen severe Bashaouran , using old recipes Etwarthnha generation after generation , nor Evsahn them to strangers . But it is believed that the secret lies in washing hair with water fermented rice , this recipe used by the women in China, Japan , and Southeast Asia for decades to care for the beauty of hair and skin , as used by the women of the imperial court of Japan , due to contain rice, minerals and vitamins, many of including the article " Petra " which works on the renewal of skin cells and pores of the hair and give it a lot and restored vitality and radiance It is available in many skincare expensive . A study Japanese in 2010 the effects of the use of rice water for hair and its benefits .
http://media.emaratalyoum.com/images/polopoly-inline-images/2014/05/long_hair_village2_fd510.jpg
http://youtu.be/F8HKf51VhhQ

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3:11

How Much Power Do Women In China Have?

How Much Power Do Women In China Have?

How Much Power Do Women In China Have?

Why China'sOne-Child Policy Failed - https://youtu.be/eNKQT7Ub2Ps
Subscribe! http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
No woman has ruled over China since the 7th century, but the tides may be slowly shifting. How much power do Chinese women have?
Learn More:
Smithsonian Magazine: The Demonization of Empress Wu
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-demonization-of-empress-wu-20743091/
The Washington Post: Researchers may have 'found' many of China's 30 million missing girls
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2016/11/30/researchers-may-have-found-many-of-chinas-30-million-missing-girls/?utm_term=.4d5c0821c4f5
The New York Times: China's Leftover Women
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/12/opinion/global/chinas-leftover-women.htmlMusicTrack Courtesy of APM Music: "Intensity"
Subscribe to SeekerDaily!
http://bit.ly/1GSoQoY
_________________________
Seeker Daily is committed to answering the smart, inquisitive questions we have about life, society, politics and anything else happening in the news. It's a place where curiosity rules and together we'll get a clearer understanding of this crazy world we live in.
Watch more Seeker Daily: http://bit.ly/1GSoQoY
Seeker Daily now has a newsletter! Get a weekly round-up of our most popular videos across all the shows we make here at Seeker Daily. For more info and to sign-up, click here. http://bit.ly/1UO1PxI
Subscribe now! http://bit.ly/1GSoQoY
Seeker Daily on Twitter https://twitter.com/Seeker
Trace Dominguez on Twitter: https://twitter.com/TraceDominguez
Jules Suzdaltsev on Twitter: https://twitter.com/jules_su
Seeker Daily on Facebook http://bit.ly/1qcsFTk
Seeker Daily on Google+ http://bit.ly/1OmDEQa
Written by: Jules Suzdaltsev
Edited by: AlexEsteves
Produced by: Cailyn Bradley, Semany Gashaw & Lauren Ellis

10:28

China's Leftover Women

China's Leftover Women

China's Leftover Women

Get 1 week early access to EVERY ADVChina episode by supporting us on Patreon
SerpentZA: http://www.patreon.com/serpentza
C-Milk: http://www.patreon.com/laowhy86
Sheng nu (剩女; shèngnǚ; common translation: "leftover women" or "leftover ladies") is a derogatory term made popular by the All-China Women's Federation that classifies women who remain unmarried in their late twenties and beyond. The term is most prominently used in China, including a state sponsored directive and program, but has been used to describe women across Asia, India, and North America. The term has gone on to become widely used in the mainstream media and has been the subject of several televisions series, magazine and newspaper articles, and book publications focusing on both the good and bad aspects of the term and surrounding culture. Xu Xiaomin of The China Daily described the sheng nus as "a social force to be reckoned with" while others have argued the term should be taken as a positive to mean "successful women". The slang term, 3S or 3S Women, meaning "single, seventies (1970s), and stuck" has also been used in place of sheng nu. The equivalent term for men, guang gun (光棍) meaning bare branches, is used to refer to men who do not marry and thus do not add 'branches' to the family tree. Similarly, shengnan (剩男) or "leftover men" has also been used.
Hop on and find out!
Living in China for so long, we would like to share some of the comparisons that we have found between China and the west, and shed some light on the situation.
Every week, we take you to a new place in China on our bikes, cover a topic, and reply to your questions.
DiscountPromo Code: RIDEWITHUS
https://vimeo.com/ondemand/conqueringsouthernchina
⚫ Watch Conquering Southern China NOW!
Winston and I ride 5000 km across 5 Chinese provinces and discover crazy food, people and customs!
Tune in, hop on, and stay awesome!
http://www.facebook.com/churchillcustoms
http://www.facebook.com/advchina
Our sister channels:
http://www.youtube.com/SerpentZA
http://www.youtube.com/laowhy86
How we communicate on the bikes and the gear we use to make the videos:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P0VkKSdwkTs
Music: Cartoon feat. Jüri Pootsmann - I Remember U

2:04

China's 'leftover women' goes viral

China's 'leftover women' goes viral

China's 'leftover women' goes viral

An advertisement centred around "leftover women" in China has gone viral, provoking an emotional debate about single women in the country. The issue of unmarried females, often stigmatised as "sheng nu" or leftover women, has long been a topic of concern in a society that prioritises marriage and motherhood for women.
Người Việt TV (c) 2016 - http://NGUOIVIETTV.com
Người Việt Online - http://NGUOI-VIET.com

2:57

My Chinese Daily Routine

My Chinese Daily Routine

My Chinese Daily Routine

Tech China-China's DIY Girl Geek

Naomi Wu is a 23-year-old self-taught tinkerer, having learned her tech skills from online tutorials and groups.
The self described "sexy cyborg" is keen to promote China as a center for innovation and women's roles as a part of China's tech evolution.

7:52

Last Call to Prayer from China Hui Ethnic Lens for female only mosques 中國唯一女性伊斯蘭清真寺

Last Call to Prayer from China Hui Ethnic Lens for female only mosques 中國唯一女性伊斯蘭清真寺

Last Call to Prayer from China Hui Ethnic Lens for female only mosques 中國唯一女性伊斯蘭清真寺

Unlike their peers around the world, Muslim women in China are enjoying having female-only mosques and getting a unique opportunity to develop their religious knowledge.
"I feel so blessed to have a mosque I can visit," 80-year-old Ma Guifang told China Daily on Tuesday, November 20.
"Not many female Muslims enjoy such a privilege."
For the past 20 years, the elderly Muslim lady from the Hui ethnic group has been attending this women-only mosque, a phenomenon unique to China.
The province's Muslim women are proud of being able to take care of their mosque.
Ma Lan, the 46-year-old caretaker, rises at 4 am to shovel coal into the boiler to ensure a good supply of hot water for the washing ritual.
She even cooperates with other female worshippers in keeping the mosque clean and ready for daily prayers and Friday congregation, which gathers about 150 worshippers.
"Women do all the work here, no matter how physical it gets," Ma said.
The mosque is financed solely by donations from female worshippers and visitors as well.
"We receive about 2,000 to 3,000 yuan ($321 to $481) a month," imam Tao Jinling said, pointing at the list of donors and how much they gave.
"Around 20 to 30 people come to the mosque every day. The number rises to around 150 during the Juma prayers on Friday."
According to official data, China has 20 million Muslims, most of them are concentrated in Xinjiang, Ningxia, Gansu, and Qinghai regions and provinces.
Unofficially, Muslim groups say the number is even higher, stating that there are from 65-100 million Muslims in China — up to 7.5 percent of the population.
In general, during Muslim prayers, women may not lead men but may lead other women, which is the case of females leading prayers in female-only mosques in China.
In Islam, the majority of jurists maintain that a woman is allowed to lead her fellow sisters in congregational prayer if there is no man to lead the congregation.
EducationChinese Muslims praise efforts of the women-only mosques in educating females about their religion.
"Only China has women's mosques, but this is not a common practice among Chinese Muslims," said Jin Rubin, secretary-general of the China Islamic Association.
"But one thing for sure is that women's mosques can provide them with a better level of education, which Islam greatly encourages."
WangYuming, director of Lanzhou's Xihu mosque, which also runs a school for women, agrees.
"Muslims care about education for women because we believe they are the lighthouse of the family," he said
"Their influence helps to keep our society stable."
The school costs the mosque about 500,000 yuan every year, but Wang believes it's worth the cost.
"In addition to teaching the women about the Qur'an and Islam, we also teach them basic math and urge them to tell their children to stay away from drugs," he said.
"Female Muslims deserve a decent level of education and the mosque is the best place to provide that.
"Now that winter has come, we have to make sure the classrooms are warm enough to allow elderly students with arthritis to sit through the classes without pain," said Wang.
Studying at the school for five years, Ma Lanying, 76, said that learning is a lifelong activity for Muslims.
"I feel so proud that I can understand the Qur'an and know exactly what the prayers mean," said Ma, who walks 45 minutes to school every weekday.
Determined to change her life, Ma Aizheng, who worked as a nurse before she retired, said she makes time to study at home in the afternoon after classes finish at 11:30 am.
"Studying the Qur'an has become a spiritual support for me," said Ma.
"I didn't have time when I was working and now I have a lot catching up to do."
more information at http://youtube.com/user/cosmeticmachines

I thought I would see what a Chinese hair salon could do with my head top. Uhhhhhhhh yeah It didn't go so well, he was ripping my hair out, he didn't know how to brush it, and the heat tools weren't hot enough to straighten out my hair, but to be fair a lot of hair salons in America can't do my hair either, I have lots of long, thick, curly hair, so....
Thanks for watching!
SOCIAL MEDIA
INSTAGRAM
@maryjanebyarm
SNAPCHAT
@poundcayke
FACEBOOK
@Maryjane Byarm
WECHAT
MARYJANERAIN

0:55

Lives of Women in Ancient China

Lives of Women in Ancient China

Lives of Women in Ancient China

WOMEN’s FUN RUN in CHINA

In today’s VLOG, March 11th, A Woman’s HealthFun Run. EVA in a tutu. Anny has a ferocious appetite. Dim Sum brunch. SingaporeDinner. Eva the fish!
Freewell DroneVideo: https://youtu.be/jr345b5aANY
The JY_VLOG is a series of semi-daily videos about my life living abroad in China. Early videos follow my expedition up Everest, and future videos will follow me as I cycle around the world from Ningbo, China to Los Angeles, USA. But for now, the VLOGs follow my everyday life in China, and give you a glimpse thru my lens at what its like to live in Asia, and all the hilarity and drama that ensues. Ohh.. and I have a reef tank, fly drones and ride trikes… so if that wets your fancy, subscribe to see more every day.
JaYoe!
MUSIC:
Opener - Garoto by Birocratic
JORDYN EDMONDS - FEEL RIGHT
https://jordynedmonds.bandcamp.com/track/feel-right
Jordyn Edmonds - Feel Like DANCING https://jordynedmonds.bandcamp.com/track/feel-like-dancing
follow my…
Website at http://www.jayoe.com
YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/JaYoeNation
Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/jayoelife/
Twitter at https://twitter.com/jayoelife
PersonalFacebook at https://www.facebook.com/mcgalat
JaYoe Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/JaYoeLife/
My Audio Podcast on Itunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/podcast-jayoe!/id1044254053?mt=2
If you wonder what JaYoe means : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4m7t4Vt1Ir8
MY GEAR:
DJI Mavic Drone: http://jayoe.com/mavic
GoPro Hero4 http://jayoe.co m/hero4dir
Feiyu Tech G4S http://jayoe.com/feiyudir
Canon 5D MkIII http://jayoe.com/5d3dir
The Canon G7X http://jayoe.com/g7xdir
My Trike | the Scorpion 20fs: http://jayoe.com/scorpion20fsdir
My trike AIDOO trailer: http://jayoe.com/aidoodir
If you would like to see more information about the my trike, check out my video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xg1Wzsz00dM
This is JY_VLOG #281
A SEMI-DAILY CHINA VLOG
#chinavlog #china #vlogging #ningbo #chinavlogger #jayoe #Jayoenation #travelvlogger #travelvlog #zhejiang

Women of Yao ( the village of Hewanglu in China )

" Rice water " .. the mystery of the village women long hair
May 25, 2014
Hair is the crown of women's accessories and femininity , but for the tribe, " Yao " in the village of ethnic Hewanglu China , poetry is the most valuable asset owned by women there . Where village women leave their hair long , nor Iksnh only once in life , because they believe that the long hair brings wealth, health and good luck. It also increases their beauty and Iqbal discourse on them .
Called on the name of this village , " village long hair " and the village has recorded a record high in the length of the hair and thus entered the Guinness " Guinness " . With an average length of women's hair by the woman 's 120, about 1.7 meters and exceed the Otoulh 2.1 meters .
During the summer and autumn women tend to the river to wash their hair and then covered with a scarf Blue obscured from sight , and habits that existed tribe of a few years ago that he was not allowed to non- spouses and children to see a woman's hair is a Msdol , if this happens and that he saw a foreign woman's hair Msdol which he had to live with her family for a period of 3 years Ksr , and after the demise of this tradition became women combing their hair black in public places without fear of sanctions that were imposed on them in the past.
Allows women Hewanglu cut their hair only once in their lives , and so Bploghen the age of 16 and can then also start to look for her partner , but the cut of her hair provides for Jeddah girl who will maintain it to guide it back to the girl on her wedding day to become the later part of her hair daily .
Each hairstyle of hairstyles owners long hair meaning and significance , if the hair is wrapped around the head of the woman , it means that she's married and has no children , and if it was coiled in a circular fashion on her forehead that would mean she is married and has children , and if she was wearing a scarf around her head , it means it looking for a partner for life , and the secret of the beauty of their hair due to the use of recipes and combinations , especially in helping them to maintain the length of hair and glitter color black even at the age of eighty.
And contributed to the women of this small village , which is famous for its population of red clothes , too, in the famous village in attracting a number of tourists who come to see the women with the long hair .
" Shampoo rice " .. the secret of women " Hewanglu "
Because of the secret behind the exaggerated height of the women feeling Yao tribe , to take care of Mutirhen severe Bashaouran , using old recipes Etwarthnha generation after generation , nor Evsahn them to strangers . But it is believed that the secret lies in washing hair with water fermented rice , this recipe used by the women in China, Japan , and Southeast Asia for decades to care for the beauty of hair and skin , as used by the women of the imperial court of Japan , due to contain rice, minerals and vitamins, many of including the article " Petra " which works on the renewal of skin cells and pores of the hair and give it a lot and restored vitality and radiance It is available in many skincare expensive . A study Japanese in 2010 the effects of the use of rice water for hair and its benefits .
http://media.emaratalyoum.com/images/polopoly-inline-images/2014/05/long_hair_village2_fd510.jpg
http://youtu.be/F8HKf51VhhQ

1:59

Behold: China's dancing granny is going to teach you some serious swag moves

Behold: China's dancing granny is going to teach you some serious swag moves

Behold: China's dancing granny is going to teach you some serious swag moves

China Daily: Donation for rural women's libraries

A donation ceremony was held in BeijingDulwich College. Money from mothers of Dulwich students was donated to a project running by a NGO call RuralWomen, in order to build two more libraries in suburbs of Beijing to improve the education and knowledge condition of rural women.

Horrific crash kills Yu Xu, 1st woman to fly China's J-10 fighter

CNN)One of China's first female fighter pilots and a member of the country's air force aerobatics team was killed in a training accident over the weekend, according to Chinese state-run media.
Capt. Yu Xu, 30, died Saturday during a routine training flight with the aerobatics team, according to the reports.
The Chinese military did not provide details of the accident in Hebei province, but state-run media, citing military sources and witnesses, said Yu ejected from her aircraft after it collided with another during the training.
After the ejection, the wing of another plane hit Yu, killing her, according to a report from China Daily.
Yu's male co-pilot ejected safely and survived, the report said. The other jet also landed safety.
The flight data recorder, or black box, from Yu's jet was recovered as authorities investigate the accident, China Daily reported.
Yu: 'I have become a real fighter pilot'
Yu was the first of four women who are certified to fly the J-10, a single-engine multi-role jet that entered service in 2004 and is considered the first Chinese domestic fighter to rival Western fighters in its capabilities.
Yu flew a J-10 fighter with China's August 1stAerobaticsTeam. Her last performance was at Airshow China in Zhuhai earlier this month.
J-10 fighters from China's August 1st aerobatics team perform at Airshow China in Zhuhai on November 4, 2016. The show was Capt. Yu Xu's last public performance.
"I think the acrobatics are quite difficult, with high requirements and standards made in all aspects. Our condition is quite satisfactory, but we need more trainings if we want to be better," Yu said of her performances in an interview with China's CCTV.
Yu, 30, joined the People's Liberation ArmyAir Force in September 2005. She qualified as a fighter pilot in 2009 and qualified to fly the J-10 in 2012, when she soloed in the fighter.
A Chinese Air Force J-10 fighter on display an Airshow China in Zhuhai November 2016.
"I'm quite happy with myself, because this solo flight means that I have become a real fighter pilot," she told CCTV.
Wan Ying, a friend of Yu's, told CNN that Yu was "a very positive, humble and nice person who loved taking care of friends."
She was also an avid reader, Wan said.
Wan said she and Yu had talked only two days before the deadly crash about meeting up for dinner.
Yu saluted as a hero
Yu's death Saturday saw many in China questioning in online forums whether women should be fighter pilots and if they were getting the right training.
"I only want to know the cause of the incident. What should be to blame for, problems with the plane or lack of training?" one poster wrote on the Chinese social website Weibo.
But state-run Global Times quoted a Chinese aviation expert, Wang Ya'nan, as saying Yu and other women in the Peoples Liberation Army Air Force were trail blazers.
"China is a pioneer in training female aerobatic pilots. When the program started, there was no foreign experience to borrow from or statistics to rely on from other countries. From this perspective, Yu Xu and other female aerobatic pilots have taken greater risks, which deserve more of our respect," Wang was quoted as saying.
On Weibo, Yu was saluted as a hero.
"Yu Xu is our most proud female pilot. Her death is a great loss for our country," wrote one poster.
"Yu is the Hua Mulan (legendary woman warrior) of our era, a rare heroine," wrote another.
The website for the All-China Women's Federation reported Monday that 60 million users of the Weibo site had clicked on Yu's story by Sunday night
https://web.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100014136190728

0:33

First woman to fly China's J-10 fighter killed in crash

First woman to fly China's J-10 fighter killed in crash

First woman to fly China's J-10 fighter killed in crash

One of China's first female fighter pilots and a member of the country's air force aerobatics team was killed in a training accident over the weekend, according to Chinese state-run media.
Capt. Yu Xu, 30, died Saturday during a routine training flight with the aerobatics team, according to the reports.
The Chinese military did not provide details of the accident in Hebei province, but state-run media, citing military sources and witnesses, said Yu ejected from her aircraft after it collided with another during the training.
After the ejection, the wing of another plane hit Yu, killing her, according to a report from China Daily.
Yu's male co-pilot ejected safely and survived, the report said. The other jet also landed safety.
The flight data recorder, or black box, from Yu's jet was recovered as authorities investigate the accident, China Daily reported.
Yu: 'I have become a real fighter pilot'
Yu was the first of four women who are certified to fly the J-10, a single-engine multi-role jet that entered service in 2004 and is considered the first Chinese domestic fighter to rival Western fighters in its capabilities.
Yu flew a J-10 fighter with China's August 1stAerobaticsTeam. Her last performance was at Airshow China in Zhuhai earlier this month.
"I think the acrobatics are quite difficult, with high requirements and standards made in all aspects. Our condition is quite satisfactory, but we need more trainings if we want to be better," Yu said of her performances in an interview with China's CCTV.
Yu, 30, joined the People's Liberation ArmyAir Force in September 2005. She qualified as a fighter pilot in 2009 and qualified to fly the J-10 in 2012, when she soloed in the fighter.
"I'm quite happy with myself, because this solo flight means that I have become a real fighter pilot," she told CCTV.
Wan Ying, a friend of Yu's, told CNN that Yu was "a very positive, humble and nice person who loved taking care of friends."
She was also an avid reader, Wan said.
Wan said she and Yu had talked only two days before the deadly crash about meeting up for dinner.
Yu saluted as a hero
Yu's death Saturday saw many in China questioning in online forums whether women should be fighter pilots and if they were getting the right training.
"I only want to know the cause of the incident. What should be to blame for, problems with the plane or lack of training?" one poster wrote on the Chinese social website Weibo.
But state-run Global Times quoted a Chinese aviation expert, Wang Ya'nan, as saying Yu and other women in the Peoples Liberation Army Air Force were trail blazers.
"China is a pioneer in training female aerobatic pilots. When the program started, there was no foreign experience to borrow from or statistics to rely on from other countries. From this perspective, Yu Xu and other female aerobatic pilots have taken greater risks, which deserve more of our respect," Wang was quoted as saying.
On Weibo, Yu was saluted as a hero.
"Yu Xu is our most proud female pilot. Her death is a great loss for our country," wrote one poster.
"Yu is the Hua Mulan (legendary woman warrior) of our era, a rare heroine," wrote another.
The website for the All-China Women's Federation reported Monday that 60 million users of the Weibo site had clicked on Yu's story by Sunday night.

China Romance Tour Testimonial International Dating Asian Women

Discover how to Attract all the Love, Money & Happiness You Desirehttp://thinkandattractsuccess.com
Recent attendee Chad breaks down his International Dating experiences while abroad on a ChinaRomance Tour.
Chad initially found http://loveme.com/go/206578 merely by searching for the best travel options for China. Chad discovered that not only is A Foreign Affair a great way to experience International Dating, but also a very valuable travel option.
Worrisome about misconceptions that Romance Tours feature Mail Order Brides, Chad decided to conduct immense research into A Foreign Affair, Romance Tours, and International Dating. He found that not only has A Foreign Affair led many men to the love of their lives, but it is also an unbeatable travel company.
Chad had the trip of a lifetime, in the company of beautiful ChineseWomen. He is now eager to get on his next tour, this time bound for the Philippines to meet more stunning Asian Women.
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Welcome back to another episode of WTFChinaStories! In this episode, we are going to discuss two phenomena in modern-day China: leftover women, and fake medicine.
You see, in China, nearly all women are put under enormous pressure to get married and have children as soon as possible, and after 27-28 years old, they are considered unmarriable and spinsters by Chinese society, which in my opinion is fucking ridiculous. Oh, well - this is China.
Anyway, I had a friend who was 24/25 and was on the cusp of getting married when her boyfriend dumped her, seemingly out of the blue...the rest of the story continues in the video!
My Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/austinguidry
Feel free to subscribe to see more videos about what it is like to be an American (or any kind of foreigner) in China! All are welcome!
SelfHarm Resources - you are NOT ALONE http://www.seventeen.com/health/advice/a4533/cutting-resources/
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/letchinasleep2
Twitter: @LetChinaSleep
我的微博：@懒惰老外

5:29

Baby falls out of vehicle and is almost run over on busy street in China - TomoNews

Baby falls out of vehicle and is almost run over on busy street in China - TomoNews

Baby falls out of vehicle and is almost run over on busy street in China - TomoNews

GUANGDONG, CHINA — Shocking video of an infant falling from a moving vehicle and narrowly avoiding a terrible end was captured on April 23 in Jieyang, southern China and has since gone viral in China and beyond.
The mother, baby and a female relative were riding a tricycle vehicle passing the busy road. When the driver pulled a gentle left turn
The child somehow fell from the vehicle, landing face-down in the middle of a multi-lane road, with traffic bearing down.
Inches from certain death, infant survives one near hit as the driver of a silver sedan stops just in time.
But the child didn’t come out of this completely unscathed. Look closely and you’ll notice the child’s left arm and head are struck.
The women in the trike taxi turn in horror as they realize what’s just happened. One wonders, was Mom even holding onto her child?
China’sPeople’s Daily reports that the poor kid was rushed to the nearest hospital and treated for various injures, the one to the child’s left arm, thankfully not too severe.
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-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: "Crying dog breaks the internet’s heart — but this sad dog story has a happy ending"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4prKTN9bYQc
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

10:28

China's Leftover Women

China's Leftover Women

China's Leftover Women

Get 1 week early access to EVERY ADVChina episode by supporting us on Patreon
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Sheng nu (剩女; shèngnǚ; common translation: "leftover women" or "leftover ladies") is a derogatory term made popular by the All-China Women's Federation that classifies women who remain unmarried in their late twenties and beyond. The term is most prominently used in China, including a state sponsored directive and program, but has been used to describe women across Asia, India, and North America. The term has gone on to become widely used in the mainstream media and has been the subject of several televisions series, magazine and newspaper articles, and book publications focusing on both the good and bad aspects of the term and surrounding culture. Xu Xiaomin of The China Daily described the sheng nus as "a social force to be reckoned with" while others have argued the term should be taken as a positive to mean "successful women". The slang term, 3S or 3S Women, meaning "single, seventies (1970s), and stuck" has also been used in place of sheng nu. The equivalent term for men, guang gun (光棍) meaning bare branches, is used to refer to men who do not marry and thus do not add 'branches' to the family tree. Similarly, shengnan (剩男) or "leftover men" has also been used.
Hop on and find out!
Living in China for so long, we would like to share some of the comparisons that we have found between China and the west, and shed some light on the situation.
Every week, we take you to a new place in China on our bikes, cover a topic, and reply to your questions.
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Tune in, hop on, and stay awesome!
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How we communicate on the bikes and the gear we use to make the videos:
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Music: Cartoon feat. Jüri Pootsmann - I Remember U

3:11

How Much Power Do Women In China Have?

How Much Power Do Women In China Have?

How Much Power Do Women In China Have?

Why China'sOne-Child Policy Failed - https://youtu.be/eNKQT7Ub2Ps
Subscribe! http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
No woman has ruled over China since the 7th century, but the tides may be slowly shifting. How much power do Chinese women have?
Learn More:
Smithsonian Magazine: The Demonization of Empress Wu
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-demonization-of-empress-wu-20743091/
The Washington Post: Researchers may have 'found' many of China's 30 million missing girls
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2016/11/30/researchers-may-have-found-many-of-chinas-30-million-missing-girls/?utm_term=.4d5c0821c4f5
The New York Times: China's Leftover Women
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/12/opinion/global/chinas-leftover-women.htmlMusicTrack Courtesy of APM Music: "Intensity"
Subscribe to SeekerDaily!
http://bit.ly/1GSoQoY
_________________________
Seeker Daily is committed to answering the smart, inquisitive questions we have about life, society, politics and anything else happening in the news. It's a place where curiosity rules and together we'll get a clearer understanding of this crazy world we live in.
Watch more Seeker Daily: http://bit.ly/1GSoQoY
Seeker Daily now has a newsletter! Get a weekly round-up of our most popular videos across all the shows we make here at Seeker Daily. For more info and to sign-up, click here. http://bit.ly/1UO1PxI
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Written by: Jules Suzdaltsev
Edited by: AlexEsteves
Produced by: Cailyn Bradley, Semany Gashaw & Lauren Ellis

China's Leftover Women

Get 1 week early access to EVERY ADVChina episode by supporting us on Patreon
SerpentZA: http://www.patreon.com/serpentza
C-Milk: http://www.patreon.com/laowhy86
Sheng nu (剩女; shèngnǚ; common translation: "leftover women" or "leftover ladies") is a derogatory term made popular by the All-China Women's Federation that classifies women who remain unmarried in their late twenties and beyond. The term is most prominently used in China, including a state sponsored directive and program, but has been used to describe women across Asia, India, and North America. The term has gone on to become widely used in the mainstream media and has been the subject of several televisions series, magazine and newspaper articles, and book publications focusing on both the good and bad aspects of the term and s...

published: 05 Dec 2016

China's 'leftover women' goes viral

An advertisement centred around "leftover women" in China has gone viral, provoking an emotional debate about single women in the country. The issue of unmarried females, often stigmatised as "sheng nu" or leftover women, has long been a topic of concern in a society that prioritises marriage and motherhood for women.
Người Việt TV (c) 2016 - http://NGUOIVIETTV.com
Người Việt Online - http://NGUOI-VIET.com

published: 25 Apr 2016

My Chinese Daily Routine

Tech China-China's DIY Girl Geek

Naomi Wu is a 23-year-old self-taught tinkerer, having learned her tech skills from online tutorials and groups.
The self described "sexy cyborg" is keen to promote China as a center for innovation and women's roles as a part of China's tech evolution.

published: 21 Dec 2016

Last Call to Prayer from China Hui Ethnic Lens for female only mosques 中國唯一女性伊斯蘭清真寺

Unlike their peers around the world, Muslim women in China are enjoying having female-only mosques and getting a unique opportunity to develop their religious knowledge.
"I feel so blessed to have a mosque I can visit," 80-year-old Ma Guifang told China Daily on Tuesday, November 20.
"Not many female Muslims enjoy such a privilege."
For the past 20 years, the elderly Muslim lady from the Hui ethnic group has been attending this women-only mosque, a phenomenon unique to China.
The province's Muslim women are proud of being able to take care of their mosque.
Ma Lan, the 46-year-old caretaker, rises at 4 am to shovel coal into the boiler to ensure a good supply of hot water for the washing ritual.
She even cooperates with other female worshippers in keeping the mosque clean and ready for d...

I thought I would see what a Chinese hair salon could do with my head top. Uhhhhhhhh yeah It didn't go so well, he was ripping my hair out, he didn't know how to brush it, and the heat tools weren't hot enough to straighten out my hair, but to be fair a lot of hair salons in America can't do my hair either, I have lots of long, thick, curly hair, so....
Thanks for watching!
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published: 29 Oct 2017

Lives of Women in Ancient China

WOMEN’s FUN RUN in CHINA

In today’s VLOG, March 11th, A Woman’s HealthFun Run. EVA in a tutu. Anny has a ferocious appetite. Dim Sum brunch. SingaporeDinner. Eva the fish!
Freewell DroneVideo: https://youtu.be/jr345b5aANY
The JY_VLOG is a series of semi-daily videos about my life living abroad in China. Early videos follow my expedition up Everest, and future videos will follow me as I cycle around the world from Ningbo, China to Los Angeles, USA. But for now, the VLOGs follow my everyday life in China, and give you a glimpse thru my lens at what its like to live in Asia, and all the hilarity and drama that ensues. Ohh.. and I have a reef tank, fly drones and ride trikes… so if that wets your fancy, subscribe to see more every day.
JaYoe!
MUSIC:
Opener - Garoto by Birocratic
JORDYN EDMONDS - FEE...

Women of Yao ( the village of Hewanglu in China )

" Rice water " .. the mystery of the village women long hair
May 25, 2014
Hair is the crown of women's accessories and femininity , but for the tribe, " Yao " in the village of ethnic Hewanglu China , poetry is the most valuable asset owned by women there . Where village women leave their hair long , nor Iksnh only once in life , because they believe that the long hair brings wealth, health and good luck. It also increases their beauty and Iqbal discourse on them .
Called on the name of this village , " village long hair " and the village has recorded a record high in the length of the hair and thus entered the Guinness " Guinness " . With an average length of women's hair by the woman 's 120, about 1.7 meters and exceed the Otoulh 2.1 meters .
During the summer and autumn women tend to th...

published: 26 May 2014

Behold: China's dancing granny is going to teach you some serious swag moves

China Daily: Donation for rural women's libraries

A donation ceremony was held in BeijingDulwich College. Money from mothers of Dulwich students was donated to a project running by a NGO call RuralWomen, in order to build two more libraries in suburbs of Beijing to improve the education and knowledge condition of rural women.

Horrific crash kills Yu Xu, 1st woman to fly China's J-10 fighter

CNN)One of China's first female fighter pilots and a member of the country's air force aerobatics team was killed in a training accident over the weekend, according to Chinese state-run media.
Capt. Yu Xu, 30, died Saturday during a routine training flight with the aerobatics team, according to the reports.
The Chinese military did not provide details of the accident in Hebei province, but state-run media, citing military sources and witnesses, said Yu ejected from her aircraft after it collided with another during the training.
After the ejection, the wing of another plane hit Yu, killing her, according to a report from China Daily.
Yu's male co-pilot ejected safely and survived, the report said. The other jet also landed safety.
The flight data recorder, or black box, from Yu's jet was ...

published: 14 Nov 2016

First woman to fly China's J-10 fighter killed in crash

One of China's first female fighter pilots and a member of the country's air force aerobatics team was killed in a training accident over the weekend, according to Chinese state-run media.
Capt. Yu Xu, 30, died Saturday during a routine training flight with the aerobatics team, according to the reports.
The Chinese military did not provide details of the accident in Hebei province, but state-run media, citing military sources and witnesses, said Yu ejected from her aircraft after it collided with another during the training.
After the ejection, the wing of another plane hit Yu, killing her, according to a report from China Daily.
Yu's male co-pilot ejected safely and survived, the report said. The other jet also landed safety.
The flight data recorder, or black box, from Yu's jet was reco...

China Romance Tour Testimonial International Dating Asian Women

Discover how to Attract all the Love, Money & Happiness You Desirehttp://thinkandattractsuccess.com
Recent attendee Chad breaks down his International Dating experiences while abroad on a ChinaRomance Tour.
Chad initially found http://loveme.com/go/206578 merely by searching for the best travel options for China. Chad discovered that not only is A Foreign Affair a great way to experience International Dating, but also a very valuable travel option.
Worrisome about misconceptions that Romance Tours feature Mail Order Brides, Chad decided to conduct immense research into A Foreign Affair, Romance Tours, and International Dating. He found that not only has A Foreign Affair led many men to the love of their lives, but it is also an unbeatable travel company.
Chad had the trip of a lifet...

Welcome back to another episode of WTFChinaStories! In this episode, we are going to discuss two phenomena in modern-day China: leftover women, and fake medicine.
You see, in China, nearly all women are put under enormous pressure to get married and have children as soon as possible, and after 27-28 years old, they are considered unmarriable and spinsters by Chinese society, which in my opinion is fucking ridiculous. Oh, well - this is China.
Anyway, I had a friend who was 24/25 and was on the cusp of getting married when her boyfriend dumped her, seemingly out of the blue...the rest of the story continues in the video!
My Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/austinguidry
Feel free to subscribe to see more videos about what it is like to be an American (or any kind of foreigner) in Chin...

published: 14 Aug 2017

Baby falls out of vehicle and is almost run over on busy street in China - TomoNews

GUANGDONG, CHINA — Shocking video of an infant falling from a moving vehicle and narrowly avoiding a terrible end was captured on April 23 in Jieyang, southern China and has since gone viral in China and beyond.
The mother, baby and a female relative were riding a tricycle vehicle passing the busy road. When the driver pulled a gentle left turn
The child somehow fell from the vehicle, landing face-down in the middle of a multi-lane road, with traffic bearing down.
Inches from certain death, infant survives one near hit as the driver of a silver sedan stops just in time.
But the child didn’t come out of this completely unscathed. Look closely and you’ll notice the child’s left arm and head are struck.
The women in the trike taxi turn in horror as they realize what’s just happened. ...

published: 02 May 2017

China's Leftover Women

Get 1 week early access to EVERY ADVChina episode by supporting us on Patreon
SerpentZA: http://www.patreon.com/serpentza
C-Milk: http://www.patreon.com/laowhy86
Sheng nu (剩女; shèngnǚ; common translation: "leftover women" or "leftover ladies") is a derogatory term made popular by the All-China Women's Federation that classifies women who remain unmarried in their late twenties and beyond. The term is most prominently used in China, including a state sponsored directive and program, but has been used to describe women across Asia, India, and North America. The term has gone on to become widely used in the mainstream media and has been the subject of several televisions series, magazine and newspaper articles, and book publications focusing on both the good and bad aspects of the term and s...

Why China'sOne-Child Policy Failed - https://youtu.be/eNKQT7Ub2Ps
Subscribe! http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
No woman has ruled over China since the 7th century, but the tides may be slowly shifting. How much power do Chinese women have?
Learn More:
Smithsonian Magazine: The Demonization of Empress Wu
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-demonization-of-empress-wu-20743091/
The Washington Post: Researchers may have 'found' many of China's 30 million missing girls
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2016/11/30/researchers-may-have-found-many-of-chinas-30-million-missing-girls/?utm_term=.4d5c0821c4f5
The New York Times: China's Leftover Women
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/12/opinion/global/chinas-leftover-women.htmlMusicTrack Courtesy of APM Music: "Intensity"
Subscribe to SeekerDaily!
http://bit.ly/1GSoQoY
_________________________
Seeker Daily is committed to answering the smart, inquisitive questions we have about life, society, politics and anything else happening in the news. It's a place where curiosity rules and together we'll get a clearer understanding of this crazy world we live in.
Watch more Seeker Daily: http://bit.ly/1GSoQoY
Seeker Daily now has a newsletter! Get a weekly round-up of our most popular videos across all the shows we make here at Seeker Daily. For more info and to sign-up, click here. http://bit.ly/1UO1PxI
Subscribe now! http://bit.ly/1GSoQoY
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Seeker Daily on Google+ http://bit.ly/1OmDEQa
Written by: Jules Suzdaltsev
Edited by: AlexEsteves
Produced by: Cailyn Bradley, Semany Gashaw & Lauren Ellis

Why China'sOne-Child Policy Failed - https://youtu.be/eNKQT7Ub2Ps
Subscribe! http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
No woman has ruled over China since the 7th century, but the tides may be slowly shifting. How much power do Chinese women have?
Learn More:
Smithsonian Magazine: The Demonization of Empress Wu
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-demonization-of-empress-wu-20743091/
The Washington Post: Researchers may have 'found' many of China's 30 million missing girls
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2016/11/30/researchers-may-have-found-many-of-chinas-30-million-missing-girls/?utm_term=.4d5c0821c4f5
The New York Times: China's Leftover Women
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/12/opinion/global/chinas-leftover-women.htmlMusicTrack Courtesy of APM Music: "Intensity"
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China's Leftover Women

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Get 1 week early access to EVERY ADVChina episode by supporting us on Patreon
SerpentZA: http://www.patreon.com/serpentza
C-Milk: http://www.patreon.com/laowhy86
Sheng nu (剩女; shèngnǚ; common translation: "leftover women" or "leftover ladies") is a derogatory term made popular by the All-China Women's Federation that classifies women who remain unmarried in their late twenties and beyond. The term is most prominently used in China, including a state sponsored directive and program, but has been used to describe women across Asia, India, and North America. The term has gone on to become widely used in the mainstream media and has been the subject of several televisions series, magazine and newspaper articles, and book publications focusing on both the good and bad aspects of the term and surrounding culture. Xu Xiaomin of The China Daily described the sheng nus as "a social force to be reckoned with" while others have argued the term should be taken as a positive to mean "successful women". The slang term, 3S or 3S Women, meaning "single, seventies (1970s), and stuck" has also been used in place of sheng nu. The equivalent term for men, guang gun (光棍) meaning bare branches, is used to refer to men who do not marry and thus do not add 'branches' to the family tree. Similarly, shengnan (剩男) or "leftover men" has also been used.
Hop on and find out!
Living in China for so long, we would like to share some of the comparisons that we have found between China and the west, and shed some light on the situation.
Every week, we take you to a new place in China on our bikes, cover a topic, and reply to your questions.
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⚫ Watch Conquering Southern China NOW!
Winston and I ride 5000 km across 5 Chinese provinces and discover crazy food, people and customs!
Tune in, hop on, and stay awesome!
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Our sister channels:
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How we communicate on the bikes and the gear we use to make the videos:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P0VkKSdwkTs
Music: Cartoon feat. Jüri Pootsmann - I Remember U

Get 1 week early access to EVERY ADVChina episode by supporting us on Patreon
SerpentZA: http://www.patreon.com/serpentza
C-Milk: http://www.patreon.com/laowhy86
Sheng nu (剩女; shèngnǚ; common translation: "leftover women" or "leftover ladies") is a derogatory term made popular by the All-China Women's Federation that classifies women who remain unmarried in their late twenties and beyond. The term is most prominently used in China, including a state sponsored directive and program, but has been used to describe women across Asia, India, and North America. The term has gone on to become widely used in the mainstream media and has been the subject of several televisions series, magazine and newspaper articles, and book publications focusing on both the good and bad aspects of the term and surrounding culture. Xu Xiaomin of The China Daily described the sheng nus as "a social force to be reckoned with" while others have argued the term should be taken as a positive to mean "successful women". The slang term, 3S or 3S Women, meaning "single, seventies (1970s), and stuck" has also been used in place of sheng nu. The equivalent term for men, guang gun (光棍) meaning bare branches, is used to refer to men who do not marry and thus do not add 'branches' to the family tree. Similarly, shengnan (剩男) or "leftover men" has also been used.
Hop on and find out!
Living in China for so long, we would like to share some of the comparisons that we have found between China and the west, and shed some light on the situation.
Every week, we take you to a new place in China on our bikes, cover a topic, and reply to your questions.
DiscountPromo Code: RIDEWITHUS
https://vimeo.com/ondemand/conqueringsouthernchina
⚫ Watch Conquering Southern China NOW!
Winston and I ride 5000 km across 5 Chinese provinces and discover crazy food, people and customs!
Tune in, hop on, and stay awesome!
http://www.facebook.com/churchillcustoms
http://www.facebook.com/advchina
Our sister channels:
http://www.youtube.com/SerpentZA
http://www.youtube.com/laowhy86
How we communicate on the bikes and the gear we use to make the videos:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P0VkKSdwkTs
Music: Cartoon feat. Jüri Pootsmann - I Remember U

China's 'leftover women' goes viral

An advertisement centred around "leftover women" in China has gone viral, provoking an emotional debate about single women in the country. The issue of unmarrie...

An advertisement centred around "leftover women" in China has gone viral, provoking an emotional debate about single women in the country. The issue of unmarried females, often stigmatised as "sheng nu" or leftover women, has long been a topic of concern in a society that prioritises marriage and motherhood for women.
Người Việt TV (c) 2016 - http://NGUOIVIETTV.com
Người Việt Online - http://NGUOI-VIET.com

An advertisement centred around "leftover women" in China has gone viral, provoking an emotional debate about single women in the country. The issue of unmarried females, often stigmatised as "sheng nu" or leftover women, has long been a topic of concern in a society that prioritises marriage and motherhood for women.
Người Việt TV (c) 2016 - http://NGUOIVIETTV.com
Người Việt Online - http://NGUOI-VIET.com

Tech China-China's DIY Girl Geek

Naomi Wu is a 23-year-old self-taught tinkerer, having learned her tech skills from online tutorials and groups.
The self described "sexy cyborg" is keen to pr...

Naomi Wu is a 23-year-old self-taught tinkerer, having learned her tech skills from online tutorials and groups.
The self described "sexy cyborg" is keen to promote China as a center for innovation and women's roles as a part of China's tech evolution.

Naomi Wu is a 23-year-old self-taught tinkerer, having learned her tech skills from online tutorials and groups.
The self described "sexy cyborg" is keen to promote China as a center for innovation and women's roles as a part of China's tech evolution.

published:21 Dec 2016

views:1312

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Last Call to Prayer from China Hui Ethnic Lens for female only mosques 中國唯一女性伊斯蘭清真寺

Unlike their peers around the world, Muslim women in China are enjoying having female-only mosques and getting a unique opportunity to develop their religious k...

Unlike their peers around the world, Muslim women in China are enjoying having female-only mosques and getting a unique opportunity to develop their religious knowledge.
"I feel so blessed to have a mosque I can visit," 80-year-old Ma Guifang told China Daily on Tuesday, November 20.
"Not many female Muslims enjoy such a privilege."
For the past 20 years, the elderly Muslim lady from the Hui ethnic group has been attending this women-only mosque, a phenomenon unique to China.
The province's Muslim women are proud of being able to take care of their mosque.
Ma Lan, the 46-year-old caretaker, rises at 4 am to shovel coal into the boiler to ensure a good supply of hot water for the washing ritual.
She even cooperates with other female worshippers in keeping the mosque clean and ready for daily prayers and Friday congregation, which gathers about 150 worshippers.
"Women do all the work here, no matter how physical it gets," Ma said.
The mosque is financed solely by donations from female worshippers and visitors as well.
"We receive about 2,000 to 3,000 yuan ($321 to $481) a month," imam Tao Jinling said, pointing at the list of donors and how much they gave.
"Around 20 to 30 people come to the mosque every day. The number rises to around 150 during the Juma prayers on Friday."
According to official data, China has 20 million Muslims, most of them are concentrated in Xinjiang, Ningxia, Gansu, and Qinghai regions and provinces.
Unofficially, Muslim groups say the number is even higher, stating that there are from 65-100 million Muslims in China — up to 7.5 percent of the population.
In general, during Muslim prayers, women may not lead men but may lead other women, which is the case of females leading prayers in female-only mosques in China.
In Islam, the majority of jurists maintain that a woman is allowed to lead her fellow sisters in congregational prayer if there is no man to lead the congregation.
EducationChinese Muslims praise efforts of the women-only mosques in educating females about their religion.
"Only China has women's mosques, but this is not a common practice among Chinese Muslims," said Jin Rubin, secretary-general of the China Islamic Association.
"But one thing for sure is that women's mosques can provide them with a better level of education, which Islam greatly encourages."
WangYuming, director of Lanzhou's Xihu mosque, which also runs a school for women, agrees.
"Muslims care about education for women because we believe they are the lighthouse of the family," he said
"Their influence helps to keep our society stable."
The school costs the mosque about 500,000 yuan every year, but Wang believes it's worth the cost.
"In addition to teaching the women about the Qur'an and Islam, we also teach them basic math and urge them to tell their children to stay away from drugs," he said.
"Female Muslims deserve a decent level of education and the mosque is the best place to provide that.
"Now that winter has come, we have to make sure the classrooms are warm enough to allow elderly students with arthritis to sit through the classes without pain," said Wang.
Studying at the school for five years, Ma Lanying, 76, said that learning is a lifelong activity for Muslims.
"I feel so proud that I can understand the Qur'an and know exactly what the prayers mean," said Ma, who walks 45 minutes to school every weekday.
Determined to change her life, Ma Aizheng, who worked as a nurse before she retired, said she makes time to study at home in the afternoon after classes finish at 11:30 am.
"Studying the Qur'an has become a spiritual support for me," said Ma.
"I didn't have time when I was working and now I have a lot catching up to do."
more information at http://youtube.com/user/cosmeticmachines

Unlike their peers around the world, Muslim women in China are enjoying having female-only mosques and getting a unique opportunity to develop their religious knowledge.
"I feel so blessed to have a mosque I can visit," 80-year-old Ma Guifang told China Daily on Tuesday, November 20.
"Not many female Muslims enjoy such a privilege."
For the past 20 years, the elderly Muslim lady from the Hui ethnic group has been attending this women-only mosque, a phenomenon unique to China.
The province's Muslim women are proud of being able to take care of their mosque.
Ma Lan, the 46-year-old caretaker, rises at 4 am to shovel coal into the boiler to ensure a good supply of hot water for the washing ritual.
She even cooperates with other female worshippers in keeping the mosque clean and ready for daily prayers and Friday congregation, which gathers about 150 worshippers.
"Women do all the work here, no matter how physical it gets," Ma said.
The mosque is financed solely by donations from female worshippers and visitors as well.
"We receive about 2,000 to 3,000 yuan ($321 to $481) a month," imam Tao Jinling said, pointing at the list of donors and how much they gave.
"Around 20 to 30 people come to the mosque every day. The number rises to around 150 during the Juma prayers on Friday."
According to official data, China has 20 million Muslims, most of them are concentrated in Xinjiang, Ningxia, Gansu, and Qinghai regions and provinces.
Unofficially, Muslim groups say the number is even higher, stating that there are from 65-100 million Muslims in China — up to 7.5 percent of the population.
In general, during Muslim prayers, women may not lead men but may lead other women, which is the case of females leading prayers in female-only mosques in China.
In Islam, the majority of jurists maintain that a woman is allowed to lead her fellow sisters in congregational prayer if there is no man to lead the congregation.
EducationChinese Muslims praise efforts of the women-only mosques in educating females about their religion.
"Only China has women's mosques, but this is not a common practice among Chinese Muslims," said Jin Rubin, secretary-general of the China Islamic Association.
"But one thing for sure is that women's mosques can provide them with a better level of education, which Islam greatly encourages."
WangYuming, director of Lanzhou's Xihu mosque, which also runs a school for women, agrees.
"Muslims care about education for women because we believe they are the lighthouse of the family," he said
"Their influence helps to keep our society stable."
The school costs the mosque about 500,000 yuan every year, but Wang believes it's worth the cost.
"In addition to teaching the women about the Qur'an and Islam, we also teach them basic math and urge them to tell their children to stay away from drugs," he said.
"Female Muslims deserve a decent level of education and the mosque is the best place to provide that.
"Now that winter has come, we have to make sure the classrooms are warm enough to allow elderly students with arthritis to sit through the classes without pain," said Wang.
Studying at the school for five years, Ma Lanying, 76, said that learning is a lifelong activity for Muslims.
"I feel so proud that I can understand the Qur'an and know exactly what the prayers mean," said Ma, who walks 45 minutes to school every weekday.
Determined to change her life, Ma Aizheng, who worked as a nurse before she retired, said she makes time to study at home in the afternoon after classes finish at 11:30 am.
"Studying the Qur'an has become a spiritual support for me," said Ma.
"I didn't have time when I was working and now I have a lot catching up to do."
more information at http://youtube.com/user/cosmeticmachines

I thought I would see what a Chinese hair salon could do with my head top. Uhhhhhhhh yeah It didn't go so well, he was ripping my hair out, he didn't know how t...

I thought I would see what a Chinese hair salon could do with my head top. Uhhhhhhhh yeah It didn't go so well, he was ripping my hair out, he didn't know how to brush it, and the heat tools weren't hot enough to straighten out my hair, but to be fair a lot of hair salons in America can't do my hair either, I have lots of long, thick, curly hair, so....
Thanks for watching!
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MARYJANERAIN

I thought I would see what a Chinese hair salon could do with my head top. Uhhhhhhhh yeah It didn't go so well, he was ripping my hair out, he didn't know how to brush it, and the heat tools weren't hot enough to straighten out my hair, but to be fair a lot of hair salons in America can't do my hair either, I have lots of long, thick, curly hair, so....
Thanks for watching!
SOCIAL MEDIA
INSTAGRAM
@maryjanebyarm
SNAPCHAT
@poundcayke
FACEBOOK
@Maryjane Byarm
WECHAT
MARYJANERAIN

In today’s VLOG, March 11th, A Woman’s HealthFun Run. EVA in a tutu. Anny has a ferocious appetite. Dim Sum brunch. SingaporeDinner. Eva the fish!
Freewell DroneVideo: https://youtu.be/jr345b5aANY
The JY_VLOG is a series of semi-daily videos about my life living abroad in China. Early videos follow my expedition up Everest, and future videos will follow me as I cycle around the world from Ningbo, China to Los Angeles, USA. But for now, the VLOGs follow my everyday life in China, and give you a glimpse thru my lens at what its like to live in Asia, and all the hilarity and drama that ensues. Ohh.. and I have a reef tank, fly drones and ride trikes… so if that wets your fancy, subscribe to see more every day.
JaYoe!
MUSIC:
Opener - Garoto by Birocratic
JORDYN EDMONDS - FEEL RIGHT
https://jordynedmonds.bandcamp.com/track/feel-right
Jordyn Edmonds - Feel Like DANCING https://jordynedmonds.bandcamp.com/track/feel-like-dancing
follow my…
Website at http://www.jayoe.com
YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/JaYoeNation
Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/jayoelife/
Twitter at https://twitter.com/jayoelife
PersonalFacebook at https://www.facebook.com/mcgalat
JaYoe Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/JaYoeLife/
My Audio Podcast on Itunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/podcast-jayoe!/id1044254053?mt=2
If you wonder what JaYoe means : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4m7t4Vt1Ir8
MY GEAR:
DJI Mavic Drone: http://jayoe.com/mavic
GoPro Hero4 http://jayoe.co m/hero4dir
Feiyu Tech G4S http://jayoe.com/feiyudir
Canon 5D MkIII http://jayoe.com/5d3dir
The Canon G7X http://jayoe.com/g7xdir
My Trike | the Scorpion 20fs: http://jayoe.com/scorpion20fsdir
My trike AIDOO trailer: http://jayoe.com/aidoodir
If you would like to see more information about the my trike, check out my video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xg1Wzsz00dM
This is JY_VLOG #281
A SEMI-DAILY CHINA VLOG
#chinavlog #china #vlogging #ningbo #chinavlogger #jayoe #Jayoenation #travelvlogger #travelvlog #zhejiang

In today’s VLOG, March 11th, A Woman’s HealthFun Run. EVA in a tutu. Anny has a ferocious appetite. Dim Sum brunch. SingaporeDinner. Eva the fish!
Freewell DroneVideo: https://youtu.be/jr345b5aANY
The JY_VLOG is a series of semi-daily videos about my life living abroad in China. Early videos follow my expedition up Everest, and future videos will follow me as I cycle around the world from Ningbo, China to Los Angeles, USA. But for now, the VLOGs follow my everyday life in China, and give you a glimpse thru my lens at what its like to live in Asia, and all the hilarity and drama that ensues. Ohh.. and I have a reef tank, fly drones and ride trikes… so if that wets your fancy, subscribe to see more every day.
JaYoe!
MUSIC:
Opener - Garoto by Birocratic
JORDYN EDMONDS - FEEL RIGHT
https://jordynedmonds.bandcamp.com/track/feel-right
Jordyn Edmonds - Feel Like DANCING https://jordynedmonds.bandcamp.com/track/feel-like-dancing
follow my…
Website at http://www.jayoe.com
YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/JaYoeNation
Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/jayoelife/
Twitter at https://twitter.com/jayoelife
PersonalFacebook at https://www.facebook.com/mcgalat
JaYoe Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/JaYoeLife/
My Audio Podcast on Itunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/podcast-jayoe!/id1044254053?mt=2
If you wonder what JaYoe means : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4m7t4Vt1Ir8
MY GEAR:
DJI Mavic Drone: http://jayoe.com/mavic
GoPro Hero4 http://jayoe.co m/hero4dir
Feiyu Tech G4S http://jayoe.com/feiyudir
Canon 5D MkIII http://jayoe.com/5d3dir
The Canon G7X http://jayoe.com/g7xdir
My Trike | the Scorpion 20fs: http://jayoe.com/scorpion20fsdir
My trike AIDOO trailer: http://jayoe.com/aidoodir
If you would like to see more information about the my trike, check out my video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xg1Wzsz00dM
This is JY_VLOG #281
A SEMI-DAILY CHINA VLOG
#chinavlog #china #vlogging #ningbo #chinavlogger #jayoe #Jayoenation #travelvlogger #travelvlog #zhejiang

Women of Yao ( the village of Hewanglu in China )

" Rice water " .. the mystery of the village women long hair
May 25, 2014
Hair is the crown of women's accessories and femininity , but for the tribe, " Yao " i...

" Rice water " .. the mystery of the village women long hair
May 25, 2014
Hair is the crown of women's accessories and femininity , but for the tribe, " Yao " in the village of ethnic Hewanglu China , poetry is the most valuable asset owned by women there . Where village women leave their hair long , nor Iksnh only once in life , because they believe that the long hair brings wealth, health and good luck. It also increases their beauty and Iqbal discourse on them .
Called on the name of this village , " village long hair " and the village has recorded a record high in the length of the hair and thus entered the Guinness " Guinness " . With an average length of women's hair by the woman 's 120, about 1.7 meters and exceed the Otoulh 2.1 meters .
During the summer and autumn women tend to the river to wash their hair and then covered with a scarf Blue obscured from sight , and habits that existed tribe of a few years ago that he was not allowed to non- spouses and children to see a woman's hair is a Msdol , if this happens and that he saw a foreign woman's hair Msdol which he had to live with her family for a period of 3 years Ksr , and after the demise of this tradition became women combing their hair black in public places without fear of sanctions that were imposed on them in the past.
Allows women Hewanglu cut their hair only once in their lives , and so Bploghen the age of 16 and can then also start to look for her partner , but the cut of her hair provides for Jeddah girl who will maintain it to guide it back to the girl on her wedding day to become the later part of her hair daily .
Each hairstyle of hairstyles owners long hair meaning and significance , if the hair is wrapped around the head of the woman , it means that she's married and has no children , and if it was coiled in a circular fashion on her forehead that would mean she is married and has children , and if she was wearing a scarf around her head , it means it looking for a partner for life , and the secret of the beauty of their hair due to the use of recipes and combinations , especially in helping them to maintain the length of hair and glitter color black even at the age of eighty.
And contributed to the women of this small village , which is famous for its population of red clothes , too, in the famous village in attracting a number of tourists who come to see the women with the long hair .
" Shampoo rice " .. the secret of women " Hewanglu "
Because of the secret behind the exaggerated height of the women feeling Yao tribe , to take care of Mutirhen severe Bashaouran , using old recipes Etwarthnha generation after generation , nor Evsahn them to strangers . But it is believed that the secret lies in washing hair with water fermented rice , this recipe used by the women in China, Japan , and Southeast Asia for decades to care for the beauty of hair and skin , as used by the women of the imperial court of Japan , due to contain rice, minerals and vitamins, many of including the article " Petra " which works on the renewal of skin cells and pores of the hair and give it a lot and restored vitality and radiance It is available in many skincare expensive . A study Japanese in 2010 the effects of the use of rice water for hair and its benefits .
http://media.emaratalyoum.com/images/polopoly-inline-images/2014/05/long_hair_village2_fd510.jpg
http://youtu.be/F8HKf51VhhQ

" Rice water " .. the mystery of the village women long hair
May 25, 2014
Hair is the crown of women's accessories and femininity , but for the tribe, " Yao " in the village of ethnic Hewanglu China , poetry is the most valuable asset owned by women there . Where village women leave their hair long , nor Iksnh only once in life , because they believe that the long hair brings wealth, health and good luck. It also increases their beauty and Iqbal discourse on them .
Called on the name of this village , " village long hair " and the village has recorded a record high in the length of the hair and thus entered the Guinness " Guinness " . With an average length of women's hair by the woman 's 120, about 1.7 meters and exceed the Otoulh 2.1 meters .
During the summer and autumn women tend to the river to wash their hair and then covered with a scarf Blue obscured from sight , and habits that existed tribe of a few years ago that he was not allowed to non- spouses and children to see a woman's hair is a Msdol , if this happens and that he saw a foreign woman's hair Msdol which he had to live with her family for a period of 3 years Ksr , and after the demise of this tradition became women combing their hair black in public places without fear of sanctions that were imposed on them in the past.
Allows women Hewanglu cut their hair only once in their lives , and so Bploghen the age of 16 and can then also start to look for her partner , but the cut of her hair provides for Jeddah girl who will maintain it to guide it back to the girl on her wedding day to become the later part of her hair daily .
Each hairstyle of hairstyles owners long hair meaning and significance , if the hair is wrapped around the head of the woman , it means that she's married and has no children , and if it was coiled in a circular fashion on her forehead that would mean she is married and has children , and if she was wearing a scarf around her head , it means it looking for a partner for life , and the secret of the beauty of their hair due to the use of recipes and combinations , especially in helping them to maintain the length of hair and glitter color black even at the age of eighty.
And contributed to the women of this small village , which is famous for its population of red clothes , too, in the famous village in attracting a number of tourists who come to see the women with the long hair .
" Shampoo rice " .. the secret of women " Hewanglu "
Because of the secret behind the exaggerated height of the women feeling Yao tribe , to take care of Mutirhen severe Bashaouran , using old recipes Etwarthnha generation after generation , nor Evsahn them to strangers . But it is believed that the secret lies in washing hair with water fermented rice , this recipe used by the women in China, Japan , and Southeast Asia for decades to care for the beauty of hair and skin , as used by the women of the imperial court of Japan , due to contain rice, minerals and vitamins, many of including the article " Petra " which works on the renewal of skin cells and pores of the hair and give it a lot and restored vitality and radiance It is available in many skincare expensive . A study Japanese in 2010 the effects of the use of rice water for hair and its benefits .
http://media.emaratalyoum.com/images/polopoly-inline-images/2014/05/long_hair_village2_fd510.jpg
http://youtu.be/F8HKf51VhhQ

published:26 May 2014

views:67261

back

Behold: China's dancing granny is going to teach you some serious swag moves

A donation ceremony was held in BeijingDulwich College. Money from mothers of Dulwich students was donated to a project running by a NGO call RuralWomen, in order to build two more libraries in suburbs of Beijing to improve the education and knowledge condition of rural women.

A donation ceremony was held in BeijingDulwich College. Money from mothers of Dulwich students was donated to a project running by a NGO call RuralWomen, in order to build two more libraries in suburbs of Beijing to improve the education and knowledge condition of rural women.

Horrific crash kills Yu Xu, 1st woman to fly China's J-10 fighter

CNN)One of China's first female fighter pilots and a member of the country's air force aerobatics team was killed in a training accident over the weekend, accor...

CNN)One of China's first female fighter pilots and a member of the country's air force aerobatics team was killed in a training accident over the weekend, according to Chinese state-run media.
Capt. Yu Xu, 30, died Saturday during a routine training flight with the aerobatics team, according to the reports.
The Chinese military did not provide details of the accident in Hebei province, but state-run media, citing military sources and witnesses, said Yu ejected from her aircraft after it collided with another during the training.
After the ejection, the wing of another plane hit Yu, killing her, according to a report from China Daily.
Yu's male co-pilot ejected safely and survived, the report said. The other jet also landed safety.
The flight data recorder, or black box, from Yu's jet was recovered as authorities investigate the accident, China Daily reported.
Yu: 'I have become a real fighter pilot'
Yu was the first of four women who are certified to fly the J-10, a single-engine multi-role jet that entered service in 2004 and is considered the first Chinese domestic fighter to rival Western fighters in its capabilities.
Yu flew a J-10 fighter with China's August 1stAerobaticsTeam. Her last performance was at Airshow China in Zhuhai earlier this month.
J-10 fighters from China's August 1st aerobatics team perform at Airshow China in Zhuhai on November 4, 2016. The show was Capt. Yu Xu's last public performance.
"I think the acrobatics are quite difficult, with high requirements and standards made in all aspects. Our condition is quite satisfactory, but we need more trainings if we want to be better," Yu said of her performances in an interview with China's CCTV.
Yu, 30, joined the People's Liberation ArmyAir Force in September 2005. She qualified as a fighter pilot in 2009 and qualified to fly the J-10 in 2012, when she soloed in the fighter.
A Chinese Air Force J-10 fighter on display an Airshow China in Zhuhai November 2016.
"I'm quite happy with myself, because this solo flight means that I have become a real fighter pilot," she told CCTV.
Wan Ying, a friend of Yu's, told CNN that Yu was "a very positive, humble and nice person who loved taking care of friends."
She was also an avid reader, Wan said.
Wan said she and Yu had talked only two days before the deadly crash about meeting up for dinner.
Yu saluted as a hero
Yu's death Saturday saw many in China questioning in online forums whether women should be fighter pilots and if they were getting the right training.
"I only want to know the cause of the incident. What should be to blame for, problems with the plane or lack of training?" one poster wrote on the Chinese social website Weibo.
But state-run Global Times quoted a Chinese aviation expert, Wang Ya'nan, as saying Yu and other women in the Peoples Liberation Army Air Force were trail blazers.
"China is a pioneer in training female aerobatic pilots. When the program started, there was no foreign experience to borrow from or statistics to rely on from other countries. From this perspective, Yu Xu and other female aerobatic pilots have taken greater risks, which deserve more of our respect," Wang was quoted as saying.
On Weibo, Yu was saluted as a hero.
"Yu Xu is our most proud female pilot. Her death is a great loss for our country," wrote one poster.
"Yu is the Hua Mulan (legendary woman warrior) of our era, a rare heroine," wrote another.
The website for the All-China Women's Federation reported Monday that 60 million users of the Weibo site had clicked on Yu's story by Sunday night
https://web.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100014136190728

CNN)One of China's first female fighter pilots and a member of the country's air force aerobatics team was killed in a training accident over the weekend, according to Chinese state-run media.
Capt. Yu Xu, 30, died Saturday during a routine training flight with the aerobatics team, according to the reports.
The Chinese military did not provide details of the accident in Hebei province, but state-run media, citing military sources and witnesses, said Yu ejected from her aircraft after it collided with another during the training.
After the ejection, the wing of another plane hit Yu, killing her, according to a report from China Daily.
Yu's male co-pilot ejected safely and survived, the report said. The other jet also landed safety.
The flight data recorder, or black box, from Yu's jet was recovered as authorities investigate the accident, China Daily reported.
Yu: 'I have become a real fighter pilot'
Yu was the first of four women who are certified to fly the J-10, a single-engine multi-role jet that entered service in 2004 and is considered the first Chinese domestic fighter to rival Western fighters in its capabilities.
Yu flew a J-10 fighter with China's August 1stAerobaticsTeam. Her last performance was at Airshow China in Zhuhai earlier this month.
J-10 fighters from China's August 1st aerobatics team perform at Airshow China in Zhuhai on November 4, 2016. The show was Capt. Yu Xu's last public performance.
"I think the acrobatics are quite difficult, with high requirements and standards made in all aspects. Our condition is quite satisfactory, but we need more trainings if we want to be better," Yu said of her performances in an interview with China's CCTV.
Yu, 30, joined the People's Liberation ArmyAir Force in September 2005. She qualified as a fighter pilot in 2009 and qualified to fly the J-10 in 2012, when she soloed in the fighter.
A Chinese Air Force J-10 fighter on display an Airshow China in Zhuhai November 2016.
"I'm quite happy with myself, because this solo flight means that I have become a real fighter pilot," she told CCTV.
Wan Ying, a friend of Yu's, told CNN that Yu was "a very positive, humble and nice person who loved taking care of friends."
She was also an avid reader, Wan said.
Wan said she and Yu had talked only two days before the deadly crash about meeting up for dinner.
Yu saluted as a hero
Yu's death Saturday saw many in China questioning in online forums whether women should be fighter pilots and if they were getting the right training.
"I only want to know the cause of the incident. What should be to blame for, problems with the plane or lack of training?" one poster wrote on the Chinese social website Weibo.
But state-run Global Times quoted a Chinese aviation expert, Wang Ya'nan, as saying Yu and other women in the Peoples Liberation Army Air Force were trail blazers.
"China is a pioneer in training female aerobatic pilots. When the program started, there was no foreign experience to borrow from or statistics to rely on from other countries. From this perspective, Yu Xu and other female aerobatic pilots have taken greater risks, which deserve more of our respect," Wang was quoted as saying.
On Weibo, Yu was saluted as a hero.
"Yu Xu is our most proud female pilot. Her death is a great loss for our country," wrote one poster.
"Yu is the Hua Mulan (legendary woman warrior) of our era, a rare heroine," wrote another.
The website for the All-China Women's Federation reported Monday that 60 million users of the Weibo site had clicked on Yu's story by Sunday night
https://web.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100014136190728

First woman to fly China's J-10 fighter killed in crash

One of China's first female fighter pilots and a member of the country's air force aerobatics team was killed in a training accident over the weekend, according...

One of China's first female fighter pilots and a member of the country's air force aerobatics team was killed in a training accident over the weekend, according to Chinese state-run media.
Capt. Yu Xu, 30, died Saturday during a routine training flight with the aerobatics team, according to the reports.
The Chinese military did not provide details of the accident in Hebei province, but state-run media, citing military sources and witnesses, said Yu ejected from her aircraft after it collided with another during the training.
After the ejection, the wing of another plane hit Yu, killing her, according to a report from China Daily.
Yu's male co-pilot ejected safely and survived, the report said. The other jet also landed safety.
The flight data recorder, or black box, from Yu's jet was recovered as authorities investigate the accident, China Daily reported.
Yu: 'I have become a real fighter pilot'
Yu was the first of four women who are certified to fly the J-10, a single-engine multi-role jet that entered service in 2004 and is considered the first Chinese domestic fighter to rival Western fighters in its capabilities.
Yu flew a J-10 fighter with China's August 1stAerobaticsTeam. Her last performance was at Airshow China in Zhuhai earlier this month.
"I think the acrobatics are quite difficult, with high requirements and standards made in all aspects. Our condition is quite satisfactory, but we need more trainings if we want to be better," Yu said of her performances in an interview with China's CCTV.
Yu, 30, joined the People's Liberation ArmyAir Force in September 2005. She qualified as a fighter pilot in 2009 and qualified to fly the J-10 in 2012, when she soloed in the fighter.
"I'm quite happy with myself, because this solo flight means that I have become a real fighter pilot," she told CCTV.
Wan Ying, a friend of Yu's, told CNN that Yu was "a very positive, humble and nice person who loved taking care of friends."
She was also an avid reader, Wan said.
Wan said she and Yu had talked only two days before the deadly crash about meeting up for dinner.
Yu saluted as a hero
Yu's death Saturday saw many in China questioning in online forums whether women should be fighter pilots and if they were getting the right training.
"I only want to know the cause of the incident. What should be to blame for, problems with the plane or lack of training?" one poster wrote on the Chinese social website Weibo.
But state-run Global Times quoted a Chinese aviation expert, Wang Ya'nan, as saying Yu and other women in the Peoples Liberation Army Air Force were trail blazers.
"China is a pioneer in training female aerobatic pilots. When the program started, there was no foreign experience to borrow from or statistics to rely on from other countries. From this perspective, Yu Xu and other female aerobatic pilots have taken greater risks, which deserve more of our respect," Wang was quoted as saying.
On Weibo, Yu was saluted as a hero.
"Yu Xu is our most proud female pilot. Her death is a great loss for our country," wrote one poster.
"Yu is the Hua Mulan (legendary woman warrior) of our era, a rare heroine," wrote another.
The website for the All-China Women's Federation reported Monday that 60 million users of the Weibo site had clicked on Yu's story by Sunday night.

One of China's first female fighter pilots and a member of the country's air force aerobatics team was killed in a training accident over the weekend, according to Chinese state-run media.
Capt. Yu Xu, 30, died Saturday during a routine training flight with the aerobatics team, according to the reports.
The Chinese military did not provide details of the accident in Hebei province, but state-run media, citing military sources and witnesses, said Yu ejected from her aircraft after it collided with another during the training.
After the ejection, the wing of another plane hit Yu, killing her, according to a report from China Daily.
Yu's male co-pilot ejected safely and survived, the report said. The other jet also landed safety.
The flight data recorder, or black box, from Yu's jet was recovered as authorities investigate the accident, China Daily reported.
Yu: 'I have become a real fighter pilot'
Yu was the first of four women who are certified to fly the J-10, a single-engine multi-role jet that entered service in 2004 and is considered the first Chinese domestic fighter to rival Western fighters in its capabilities.
Yu flew a J-10 fighter with China's August 1stAerobaticsTeam. Her last performance was at Airshow China in Zhuhai earlier this month.
"I think the acrobatics are quite difficult, with high requirements and standards made in all aspects. Our condition is quite satisfactory, but we need more trainings if we want to be better," Yu said of her performances in an interview with China's CCTV.
Yu, 30, joined the People's Liberation ArmyAir Force in September 2005. She qualified as a fighter pilot in 2009 and qualified to fly the J-10 in 2012, when she soloed in the fighter.
"I'm quite happy with myself, because this solo flight means that I have become a real fighter pilot," she told CCTV.
Wan Ying, a friend of Yu's, told CNN that Yu was "a very positive, humble and nice person who loved taking care of friends."
She was also an avid reader, Wan said.
Wan said she and Yu had talked only two days before the deadly crash about meeting up for dinner.
Yu saluted as a hero
Yu's death Saturday saw many in China questioning in online forums whether women should be fighter pilots and if they were getting the right training.
"I only want to know the cause of the incident. What should be to blame for, problems with the plane or lack of training?" one poster wrote on the Chinese social website Weibo.
But state-run Global Times quoted a Chinese aviation expert, Wang Ya'nan, as saying Yu and other women in the Peoples Liberation Army Air Force were trail blazers.
"China is a pioneer in training female aerobatic pilots. When the program started, there was no foreign experience to borrow from or statistics to rely on from other countries. From this perspective, Yu Xu and other female aerobatic pilots have taken greater risks, which deserve more of our respect," Wang was quoted as saying.
On Weibo, Yu was saluted as a hero.
"Yu Xu is our most proud female pilot. Her death is a great loss for our country," wrote one poster.
"Yu is the Hua Mulan (legendary woman warrior) of our era, a rare heroine," wrote another.
The website for the All-China Women's Federation reported Monday that 60 million users of the Weibo site had clicked on Yu's story by Sunday night.

Discover how to Attract all the Love, Money & Happiness You Desirehttp://thinkandattractsuccess.com
Recent attendee Chad breaks down his International Dating experiences while abroad on a ChinaRomance Tour.
Chad initially found http://loveme.com/go/206578 merely by searching for the best travel options for China. Chad discovered that not only is A Foreign Affair a great way to experience International Dating, but also a very valuable travel option.
Worrisome about misconceptions that Romance Tours feature Mail Order Brides, Chad decided to conduct immense research into A Foreign Affair, Romance Tours, and International Dating. He found that not only has A Foreign Affair led many men to the love of their lives, but it is also an unbeatable travel company.
Chad had the trip of a lifetime, in the company of beautiful ChineseWomen. He is now eager to get on his next tour, this time bound for the Philippines to meet more stunning Asian Women.
Start Your International Dating JourneyFREE
AND
Discover Our Singles Romance Tours
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PLUS
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Are following this guide right now to generate
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…and you can start using it 15 minutes from now
If you’d like, it’s 100% FREE
You can get it here: http://loveme.com/go/206578

Discover how to Attract all the Love, Money & Happiness You Desirehttp://thinkandattractsuccess.com
Recent attendee Chad breaks down his International Dating experiences while abroad on a ChinaRomance Tour.
Chad initially found http://loveme.com/go/206578 merely by searching for the best travel options for China. Chad discovered that not only is A Foreign Affair a great way to experience International Dating, but also a very valuable travel option.
Worrisome about misconceptions that Romance Tours feature Mail Order Brides, Chad decided to conduct immense research into A Foreign Affair, Romance Tours, and International Dating. He found that not only has A Foreign Affair led many men to the love of their lives, but it is also an unbeatable travel company.
Chad had the trip of a lifetime, in the company of beautiful ChineseWomen. He is now eager to get on his next tour, this time bound for the Philippines to meet more stunning Asian Women.
Start Your International Dating JourneyFREE
AND
Discover Our Singles Romance Tours
http://loveme.com/go/206578
PLUS
Over 45,000+ average, ordinary people
Are following this guide right now to generate
$100 - $500+ per day online from home
http://loveme.com/go/206578
…and you can start using it 15 minutes from now
If you’d like, it’s 100% FREE
You can get it here: http://loveme.com/go/206578

Welcome back to another episode of WTFChinaStories! In this episode, we are going to discuss two phenomena in modern-day China: leftover women, and fake medic...

Welcome back to another episode of WTFChinaStories! In this episode, we are going to discuss two phenomena in modern-day China: leftover women, and fake medicine.
You see, in China, nearly all women are put under enormous pressure to get married and have children as soon as possible, and after 27-28 years old, they are considered unmarriable and spinsters by Chinese society, which in my opinion is fucking ridiculous. Oh, well - this is China.
Anyway, I had a friend who was 24/25 and was on the cusp of getting married when her boyfriend dumped her, seemingly out of the blue...the rest of the story continues in the video!
My Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/austinguidry
Feel free to subscribe to see more videos about what it is like to be an American (or any kind of foreigner) in China! All are welcome!
SelfHarm Resources - you are NOT ALONE http://www.seventeen.com/health/advice/a4533/cutting-resources/
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/letchinasleep2
Twitter: @LetChinaSleep
我的微博：@懒惰老外

Welcome back to another episode of WTFChinaStories! In this episode, we are going to discuss two phenomena in modern-day China: leftover women, and fake medicine.
You see, in China, nearly all women are put under enormous pressure to get married and have children as soon as possible, and after 27-28 years old, they are considered unmarriable and spinsters by Chinese society, which in my opinion is fucking ridiculous. Oh, well - this is China.
Anyway, I had a friend who was 24/25 and was on the cusp of getting married when her boyfriend dumped her, seemingly out of the blue...the rest of the story continues in the video!
My Patreon: http://www.patreon.com/austinguidry
Feel free to subscribe to see more videos about what it is like to be an American (or any kind of foreigner) in China! All are welcome!
SelfHarm Resources - you are NOT ALONE http://www.seventeen.com/health/advice/a4533/cutting-resources/
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/letchinasleep2
Twitter: @LetChinaSleep
我的微博：@懒惰老外

published:14 Aug 2017

views:1437

back

Baby falls out of vehicle and is almost run over on busy street in China - TomoNews

GUANGDONG, CHINA — Shocking video of an infant falling from a moving vehicle and narrowly avoiding a terrible end was captured on April 23 in Jieyang, southern ...

GUANGDONG, CHINA — Shocking video of an infant falling from a moving vehicle and narrowly avoiding a terrible end was captured on April 23 in Jieyang, southern China and has since gone viral in China and beyond.
The mother, baby and a female relative were riding a tricycle vehicle passing the busy road. When the driver pulled a gentle left turn
The child somehow fell from the vehicle, landing face-down in the middle of a multi-lane road, with traffic bearing down.
Inches from certain death, infant survives one near hit as the driver of a silver sedan stops just in time.
But the child didn’t come out of this completely unscathed. Look closely and you’ll notice the child’s left arm and head are struck.
The women in the trike taxi turn in horror as they realize what’s just happened. One wonders, was Mom even holding onto her child?
China’sPeople’s Daily reports that the poor kid was rushed to the nearest hospital and treated for various injures, the one to the child’s left arm, thankfully not too severe.
----------------------------------------­---------------------
Go to https://www.patreon.com/tomonews and become a Patron now
TomoNews is now on Patreon and we've got some cool perks for our hardcore fans.
TomoNews is your best source for real news. We cover the funniest, craziest and most talked-about stories on the internet. Our tone is irreverent and unapologetic. If you’re laughing, we’re laughing. If you’re outraged, we’re outraged. We tell it like it is. And because we can animate stories, TomoNews brings you news like you’ve never seen before.
Visit our official website for all the latest, uncensored videos: http://us.tomonews.com
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-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: "Crying dog breaks the internet’s heart — but this sad dog story has a happy ending"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4prKTN9bYQc
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

GUANGDONG, CHINA — Shocking video of an infant falling from a moving vehicle and narrowly avoiding a terrible end was captured on April 23 in Jieyang, southern China and has since gone viral in China and beyond.
The mother, baby and a female relative were riding a tricycle vehicle passing the busy road. When the driver pulled a gentle left turn
The child somehow fell from the vehicle, landing face-down in the middle of a multi-lane road, with traffic bearing down.
Inches from certain death, infant survives one near hit as the driver of a silver sedan stops just in time.
But the child didn’t come out of this completely unscathed. Look closely and you’ll notice the child’s left arm and head are struck.
The women in the trike taxi turn in horror as they realize what’s just happened. One wonders, was Mom even holding onto her child?
China’sPeople’s Daily reports that the poor kid was rushed to the nearest hospital and treated for various injures, the one to the child’s left arm, thankfully not too severe.
----------------------------------------­---------------------
Go to https://www.patreon.com/tomonews and become a Patron now
TomoNews is now on Patreon and we've got some cool perks for our hardcore fans.
TomoNews is your best source for real news. We cover the funniest, craziest and most talked-about stories on the internet. Our tone is irreverent and unapologetic. If you’re laughing, we’re laughing. If you’re outraged, we’re outraged. We tell it like it is. And because we can animate stories, TomoNews brings you news like you’ve never seen before.
Visit our official website for all the latest, uncensored videos: http://us.tomonews.com
Check out our Android app: http://bit.ly/1rddhCj
Check out our iOS app: http://bit.ly/1gO3z1f
Get top stories delivered to your inbox everyday: http://bit.ly/tomo-newsletter
See a story that should be animated? Tell us about it! Suggest a story here: http://bit.ly/suggest-tomonews
Stay connected with us here:
Facebook http://www.facebook.com/TomoNewsUS
Twitter @tomonewsus http://www.twitter.com/TomoNewsUS
Google+ http://plus.google.com/+TomoNewsUS/
Instagram @tomonewsus http://instagram.com/tomonewsus
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: "Crying dog breaks the internet’s heart — but this sad dog story has a happy ending"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4prKTN9bYQc
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

China's Leftover Women

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SerpentZA: http://www.patreon.com/serpentza
C-Milk: http://www.patreon.com/laowhy8...

Get 1 week early access to EVERY ADVChina episode by supporting us on Patreon
SerpentZA: http://www.patreon.com/serpentza
C-Milk: http://www.patreon.com/laowhy86
Sheng nu (剩女; shèngnǚ; common translation: "leftover women" or "leftover ladies") is a derogatory term made popular by the All-China Women's Federation that classifies women who remain unmarried in their late twenties and beyond. The term is most prominently used in China, including a state sponsored directive and program, but has been used to describe women across Asia, India, and North America. The term has gone on to become widely used in the mainstream media and has been the subject of several televisions series, magazine and newspaper articles, and book publications focusing on both the good and bad aspects of the term and surrounding culture. Xu Xiaomin of The China Daily described the sheng nus as "a social force to be reckoned with" while others have argued the term should be taken as a positive to mean "successful women". The slang term, 3S or 3S Women, meaning "single, seventies (1970s), and stuck" has also been used in place of sheng nu. The equivalent term for men, guang gun (光棍) meaning bare branches, is used to refer to men who do not marry and thus do not add 'branches' to the family tree. Similarly, shengnan (剩男) or "leftover men" has also been used.
Hop on and find out!
Living in China for so long, we would like to share some of the comparisons that we have found between China and the west, and shed some light on the situation.
Every week, we take you to a new place in China on our bikes, cover a topic, and reply to your questions.
DiscountPromo Code: RIDEWITHUS
https://vimeo.com/ondemand/conqueringsouthernchina
⚫ Watch Conquering Southern China NOW!
Winston and I ride 5000 km across 5 Chinese provinces and discover crazy food, people and customs!
Tune in, hop on, and stay awesome!
http://www.facebook.com/churchillcustoms
http://www.facebook.com/advchina
Our sister channels:
http://www.youtube.com/SerpentZA
http://www.youtube.com/laowhy86
How we communicate on the bikes and the gear we use to make the videos:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P0VkKSdwkTs
Music: Cartoon feat. Jüri Pootsmann - I Remember U

Get 1 week early access to EVERY ADVChina episode by supporting us on Patreon
SerpentZA: http://www.patreon.com/serpentza
C-Milk: http://www.patreon.com/laowhy86
Sheng nu (剩女; shèngnǚ; common translation: "leftover women" or "leftover ladies") is a derogatory term made popular by the All-China Women's Federation that classifies women who remain unmarried in their late twenties and beyond. The term is most prominently used in China, including a state sponsored directive and program, but has been used to describe women across Asia, India, and North America. The term has gone on to become widely used in the mainstream media and has been the subject of several televisions series, magazine and newspaper articles, and book publications focusing on both the good and bad aspects of the term and surrounding culture. Xu Xiaomin of The China Daily described the sheng nus as "a social force to be reckoned with" while others have argued the term should be taken as a positive to mean "successful women". The slang term, 3S or 3S Women, meaning "single, seventies (1970s), and stuck" has also been used in place of sheng nu. The equivalent term for men, guang gun (光棍) meaning bare branches, is used to refer to men who do not marry and thus do not add 'branches' to the family tree. Similarly, shengnan (剩男) or "leftover men" has also been used.
Hop on and find out!
Living in China for so long, we would like to share some of the comparisons that we have found between China and the west, and shed some light on the situation.
Every week, we take you to a new place in China on our bikes, cover a topic, and reply to your questions.
DiscountPromo Code: RIDEWITHUS
https://vimeo.com/ondemand/conqueringsouthernchina
⚫ Watch Conquering Southern China NOW!
Winston and I ride 5000 km across 5 Chinese provinces and discover crazy food, people and customs!
Tune in, hop on, and stay awesome!
http://www.facebook.com/churchillcustoms
http://www.facebook.com/advchina
Our sister channels:
http://www.youtube.com/SerpentZA
http://www.youtube.com/laowhy86
How we communicate on the bikes and the gear we use to make the videos:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P0VkKSdwkTs
Music: Cartoon feat. Jüri Pootsmann - I Remember U

Why China'sOne-Child Policy Failed - https://youtu.be/eNKQT7Ub2Ps
Subscribe! http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
No woman has ruled over China since the 7th century, but the tides may be slowly shifting. How much power do Chinese women have?
Learn More:
Smithsonian Magazine: The Demonization of Empress Wu
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-demonization-of-empress-wu-20743091/
The Washington Post: Researchers may have 'found' many of China's 30 million missing girls
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2016/11/30/researchers-may-have-found-many-of-chinas-30-million-missing-girls/?utm_term=.4d5c0821c4f5
The New York Times: China's Leftover Women
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/12/opinion/global/chinas-leftover-women.htmlMusicTrack Courtesy of APM Music: "Intensity"
Subscribe to SeekerDaily!
http://bit.ly/1GSoQoY
_________________________
Seeker Daily is committed to answering the smart, inquisitive questions we have about life, society, politics and anything else happening in the news. It's a place where curiosity rules and together we'll get a clearer understanding of this crazy world we live in.
Watch more Seeker Daily: http://bit.ly/1GSoQoY
Seeker Daily now has a newsletter! Get a weekly round-up of our most popular videos across all the shows we make here at Seeker Daily. For more info and to sign-up, click here. http://bit.ly/1UO1PxI
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Written by: Jules Suzdaltsev
Edited by: AlexEsteves
Produced by: Cailyn Bradley, Semany Gashaw & Lauren Ellis

Why China'sOne-Child Policy Failed - https://youtu.be/eNKQT7Ub2Ps
Subscribe! http://bitly.com/1iLOHml
No woman has ruled over China since the 7th century, but the tides may be slowly shifting. How much power do Chinese women have?
Learn More:
Smithsonian Magazine: The Demonization of Empress Wu
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-demonization-of-empress-wu-20743091/
The Washington Post: Researchers may have 'found' many of China's 30 million missing girls
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2016/11/30/researchers-may-have-found-many-of-chinas-30-million-missing-girls/?utm_term=.4d5c0821c4f5
The New York Times: China's Leftover Women
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/12/opinion/global/chinas-leftover-women.htmlMusicTrack Courtesy of APM Music: "Intensity"
Subscribe to SeekerDaily!
http://bit.ly/1GSoQoY
_________________________
Seeker Daily is committed to answering the smart, inquisitive questions we have about life, society, politics and anything else happening in the news. It's a place where curiosity rules and together we'll get a clearer understanding of this crazy world we live in.
Watch more Seeker Daily: http://bit.ly/1GSoQoY
Seeker Daily now has a newsletter! Get a weekly round-up of our most popular videos across all the shows we make here at Seeker Daily. For more info and to sign-up, click here. http://bit.ly/1UO1PxI
Subscribe now! http://bit.ly/1GSoQoY
Seeker Daily on Twitter https://twitter.com/Seeker
Trace Dominguez on Twitter: https://twitter.com/TraceDominguez
Jules Suzdaltsev on Twitter: https://twitter.com/jules_su
Seeker Daily on Facebook http://bit.ly/1qcsFTk
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Written by: Jules Suzdaltsev
Edited by: AlexEsteves
Produced by: Cailyn Bradley, Semany Gashaw & Lauren Ellis

Shanghai Travel Guide

Our ShanghaiTravelGuide! It's finally here, thanks for being so patient everyone. And thanks to our friends at Cathay Pacific for partnering with us on our Shanghai episode and the rest of Season 3 as we discover a #LifeWellTravelled - find out more at http://www.cathaypacific.com/lifewelltravelled
Shanghai is an intense city on all levels. The sights, the sounds, the smells, the stories, Shanghai rewards the curious traveller around every corner. We spent 5 days exploring this incredible city and we can't wait to get back.
Thanks toKyle from UnTour FoodTours for showing us around Shanghai's incredible food scene. Check them out at http://untourfoodtours.com/
How we film our travel guides - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oPFmRWNzG84

China travel guide 2016 HD

Incredible video of China with information about the main cities, best places and prices.
THANKS FOR WATCHING!!! If you like the content and support the channel, you can give a donation at this link https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=4QFST95LX57YJ
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In this China travel guide you can see: Beijing, The Great Wall, Shanghai, Hangzhou, Xian, Chengdu, Guilin and Hong Kong.
China tourism video for all kind of travellers
You can get a lot of information in https://www.travelchinaguide.com/
This video has been created and recorded by Bliko Redi with the collaboration of Nuria San Roman in the subtitles
Travel China and enjoy the experince!!!
The Great Wall song:
Long Road Ahead de Kevin MacLeod está...

published: 20 Apr 2016

China Travel Guide: Beijing, Xi'an & Shanghai 🇨🇳

Check out this travel guide to China from Kelley Ferro!
✈Join the adventure & SUBSCRIBE▶▶http://bit.ly/KelleyFerro
▼◦▼◦▼ MORE INFO & LINKS IN THE DESCRIPTION ▼◦▼◦▼
What to do, see, eat and experience in these vibrant Chinese cities.
I had a whirlwind week in China with Wendy WuTours and I experienced so much in this exciting, ancient and modern country. From the skyscrapers of Shanghai, to biking the old wall of Xi'an, to seeing the Terra Cotta Warriors up close and exploring the Mutianyu section of the Great Wall—China was full of life changing moments. Here's a glimpse into what we did on our tour through this amazing country.
Live like a Local in China with Kelley Ferro: USTOA TravelTogetherSeries featuring Wendy Wu Tours & Visit China Now
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Tips for traveling to China for the first time

I used to live in Shanghai, China so I thought it would be fun to give you my 10 tips for traveling to China for the first time. China is truly an amazing, beautiful and super interesting country, and I highly recommend you all to give it a try! ;)
My Shanghai video diary:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5gT5wGYaOIw
My blog post about China:
https://bykaja.com/2015/02/14/tips-for-traveling-to-china-for-the-first-time/
Beijing photo diary:
https://bykaja.com/2014/06/16/beijing-photo-diary/
Shanghai photo diary:
https://bykaja.com/2014/02/28/shanghai-photo-diary/
My other videos:
Spring break in Rome
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QutxcdcIWVI
Gran Canaria
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2LsnBRihq4E
Vietnam
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AM-ODafQPn0
Copenhagen vlog
https://www....

Top Things to See in China | A Guide to The Best Tourist Attractions in China

Top Things to do in China!
I know that this is long overdue and that I haven't posted a video in a while, but seriously China!! Anyways, this list is less about the top attractions in China and more about the best ones. Moreover, it features the off the beaten path destinations in China as well. So what are the most incredible things to do in China. Here's my take:
10) Changsha and the Mao Zedong Staute (长沙和毛泽东雕像)
This is crazy, in the capital of Hunan Province there's a giant statue of Mao Zedong that looks like something out of Mount Rushmore. Definitely a top thing to see in China.
9) Bifengxia Panda Base (碧峰峡大熊猫保护区)
The PandaCenter in Chengdu is a bit over-touristed. That's why it's a great option to head to Bifengxia on the edge of the village of Ya'an, and up to this amazing ...

published: 04 Jul 2014

My China Travel Tips after 47 Days of Traveling China // This is China

After an entire summer of traveling China, I want to give you my travel tips, suggestions, and warnings about traveling the country. This is what you need to know about travelling in China. How much things cost. How to get around. How you can travel off the beaten path. I find China a difficult country to travel. The language barrier has a greater impact than most other destinations. In this video, I discuss hotels, food, and transportation - including what to expect and how you can make your trip go smoothly.
Have you traveled China? Did you like it? Did you find it more difficult than other countries?
---/// ABOUT ME \\\---
I live in China and am constantly exploring and traveling the country and other parts of Asia. Subscribe to my channel to watch more adventures... and to learn a b...